Heat Stress and India's Textile Industry
The Indian textile industry is currently facing a severe productivity crisis due to escalating heat conditions, which have significant implications for both workers and the global supply chain. As traditional hubs like Bangladesh face political instability, international buyers are turning to India. However, this shift is occurring amidst a thermodynamic crisis.
Impact on Workers and Productivity
- A textile worker in Tamil Nadu loses 50% of her work capacity on a 40°C afternoon, resulting in a 50% loss of daily wages due to lack of sick leaves or cooling breaks.
- Between 2001 and 2020, India lost an estimated 259 billion labor hours annually due to heat stress, translating to a productivity loss exceeding $600 billion each year.
- In manufacturing hubs like Palghar, Maharashtra, extreme heat has caused a reduction in production capacity by up to 50%, affecting operations, increasing workplace injuries, and causing health issues like heatstroke.
Industrial Challenges
- Industrial equipment often overheats and fails due to being designed for more temperate climates.
- Indoor temperatures in factories frequently exceed permissible thresholds, severely impacting worker productivity and health.
- Research indicates that at 33-34°C, a worker’s capacity is effectively halved, and annual output falls by 2% per degree Celsius increase in temperature.
Economic Consequences
- India's textile industry employs 45 million people and controls 39% of global cotton cultivation, yet faces operational collapse due to heat stress.
- Global brands impose strict delivery deadlines, making it challenging for factory managers to balance worker welfare with financial obligations.
- By 2030, India is projected to lose 5.8% of its daily working hours to extreme heat, equivalent to 34 million full-time jobs.
Solutions and Recommendations
- Recognizing heat stress as a supply chain risk and integrating climate projections into industrial policies.
- Adopting mandatory heat-action plans with enforceable temperature thresholds, cooling breaks, and worker health assessments.
- Reforming financing mechanisms to include climate risk in loan assessments and supporting investments in cooling systems and heat-resilient technologies.
- Strengthening labor protection codes to ensure access to clean drinking water and shaded rest areas for workers.
- Encouraging innovation through targeted R&D for wearable cooling technologies and heat-tolerant cotton varieties.
- International buyers should participate in adaptation costs through fair pricing and extended lead times.
Without addressing these challenges, India's workers will continue to bear the brunt of lost wages and health risks, exacerbating the socio-economic divide and impacting the global supply chain.