UN ESCAP Asia-Pacific Disaster Report 2025
1. What is the News?
The United Nations ESCAP released the Asia-Pacific Disaster Report 2025, titled “Rising Heat, Rising Risk”, warning that extreme heat is becoming the fastest-growing and most dangerous climate hazard in the Asia-Pacific region.
2. About the Report
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Published by UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UN ESCAP).
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Biennial flagship publication assessing disaster risks, climate trends, economic losses, and resilience gaps.
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Focus of 2025 report: Heat-related hazards and cascading systems risks.
3. Key Findings
a) Extreme Heat Is the Fastest-Growing Disaster Risk
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Heatwaves rising faster than floods, cyclones, and droughts.
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Megacities (Delhi, Dhaka, Karachi, Bangkok) may face 2–7°C higher temperatures due to Urban Heat Island effect.
b) South & Southwest Asia Most Vulnerable
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300+ days per year may fall in dangerous heat index.
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Outdoor workers, urban poor, elderly, and children at highest risk.
c) Cascading Impacts
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Health systems under pressure — more heat stroke & heat-related deaths.
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Agriculture losses, reduced labour productivity.
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Water scarcity and energy demand spikes.
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Increased poverty and inequality.
d) Economic Losses
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Climate-induced disasters may cause up to 6% GDP loss annually in several Asia-Pacific economies if action is delayed.
4. India-Specific Relevance
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India identified as a severe high-risk zone for rising heat.
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Megacities like Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai flagged for long heatwave seasons.
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Risks to:
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Urban slum populations,
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Agriculture (reduced yields),
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Water systems (depletion),
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Energy infrastructure.
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5. Recommendations by the Report
a) Transformative Adaptation
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Increase green cover, reflective roofs, climate-resilient city planning.
b) Strengthen Early Warning Systems
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Heatwave forecasting, real-time alerts, localised risk mapping.
c) Reduce Vulnerability
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Social protection for outdoor workers, low-income households.
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Access to cooling centres, water availability, healthcare strengthening.
d) Regional Cooperation
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Shared climate data, funding mobilization, cross-border risk management.


