Are Sustainability Initiatives Actually Sustainable for Supply Chains?
In the long run, sustainability shields companies from risks while fueling growth, creating systems that thrive amid rising costs and…
The 2025 monsoon was brutally unpredictable with sudden floods, flash landslides, and extreme rainfall battered millions across India.
Jhalak Jain
In 2025, India and neighboring countries witnessed a devastating monsoon season. According to IMD, from June to September, more than 1,500 people lost their lives in India alone. In Punjab, 1,400 villages flooded and over 370,000 acres of farmland were ruined. Uttarakhand saw an astonishing 24% excess rainfall, with a September day recording nearly 500% above normal. Assam’s flooding in early June affected some 364,000 people.
The pattern: longer dry spells punctuated by violent downpours, often within hours, as was seen in 2025 when nearly half the monsoon’s rain fell in “just 20 to 30 hours” in some places.
Scientists warn South Asia’s monsoon is now 7–10% wetter and more erratic with every degree of warming, resulting in flash floods in some regions, droughts in others, and complete unpredictability. For the first time, satellite images suggest the southwest monsoon may have breached the Himalayas into Tibet that is unprecedented and deeply worrying. These shifting winds underscore how vulnerable 1.8 billion people remain when the region’s great “rain machine” stutters or veers out of control.
Punjab Flood 2025. (Source: Down To Earth)
In the long run, sustainability shields companies from risks while fueling growth, creating systems that thrive amid rising costs and…
Scope 3 emissions represent the majority of industrial carbon footprints worldwide. It spans suppliers, service providers, distributors, customers, and more,…
Owing to Global warming, the sea surface temperatures rise in the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea that are creating new moisture and heat dynamics. This amplifies rainfall and disturbs the regular patterns of the monsoon, intensifying both floods and droughts thus making individual events more extreme and less predictable than ever before.
Big corporations are responsible for a large share of industrial emissions, placing a disproportionate burden on vulnerable populations. Fossil fuel companies, industrial manufacturers, and large-scale agricultural corporations have been slow to transition to sustainable technologies and have invested minimally in climate adaptation, worsening impacts on communities in South Asia.
One of the biggest and often overlooked contributors to extreme weather is unchecked urban expansion, hill cutting, deforestation, and the loss of wetlands. A Down To Earth report quotes environmentalist Sunita Narain saying the scale of this year’s devastation is about more than rising temperatures; it stems from “reckless growth at all costs.”
Across South Asia, climate policy is often reactive and underfunded. Inadequate early warning systems, weak enforcement of zoning, and delayed disaster response compound the risks. Until all stakeholders—from governments to corporations—are held accountable, communities will stay on the frontline of disaster.
People, Food, and Water in Peril
The monsoon remains the bedrock of water supply and agriculture for nearly 2 billion people. Shifts in rainfall timing or volume can devastate harvests, dry up irrigation canals, and cut off drinking water for millions.
Floods, Landslides, Glacial Threats
From the Himalayan foothills to lowland plains, 2025 brought flooding, landslides, and glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs). Melting glaciers and swollen rivers now pose year-round threats.
Infrastructure and Economic Disruption
Roads, power supplies, and urban infrastructure are designed for a past climate regime. They are being overwhelmed by today’s extremes and leading to mounting repair costs and economic losses.
Who Pays the Price?
Disadvantaged communities are hit hardest. Rural farmers, Himalayan villages, and the urban poor face the starkest losses, but the impacts increasingly ripple across the whole region.
South Asia’s monsoon system sits at a crossroads. Rain belts are shifting, storms are intensifying, and historic weather patterns are breaking down. The choices made by leaders, corporations, and communities now will determine whether the region’s lifeline is fortified or if storms to come will devastate ever-larger swathes of society. Tackling this challenge with data, policy, investment, and grassroots action is an urgent need.
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