Essayer OR - Gratuit
Climate change has turned water into a business risk
Mint Kolkata
|October 14, 2025
Businesses in India have typically treated water as a steady input—not perfect, but reliable enough. Climate change is unravelling that assumption. Variable rainfall, falling groundwater tables, depleting aquifers and intensifying floods are reshaping how firms source this most basic of industrial inputs. Water has quietly become a new frontier of business risk.
Rising temperatures, erratic monsoons, frequent droughts and increasingly likely extreme weather events are reducing reliable water availability while driving up demand, especially from water-intensive industries like power generation, textiles and steel. By 2030, for instance, 70% of India’s thermal power plants are projected to face severe water stress, threatening energy security.
India’s economy is thirsty. Besides agriculture, textile factories, power plants, steel mills, food processors and drugmakers have long relied on abundant and predictable water supplies. This certainty is receding. As much as 17% of India’s groundwater blocks are already overexploited and the situation is worsening every year, according to the Central Water Commission. The Niti Aayog warns that almost 600 million Indians live under high to extreme water stress.
These numbers matter to business even if Indian industry, unlike farming, does not dominate India’s water withdrawal. Industries rely on consistent quality and timely supply. A thermal power plant cannot run if its cooling water fails. Textile dyeing, pulp and paper mills and steel production all suffer when water fails in quantity or reliability, or is too polluted.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition October 14, 2025 de Mint Kolkata.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Mint Kolkata
Mint Kolkata
Donald Trump wants to secure Hormuz. Here's what it would take.
Securing the strait would mean big commitments of warships or a sizable ground operation
4 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
TRUMP'S IRAN WAR EXPOSES LIMITS OF AMERICAN POWER
E-truck, bus makers allowed to import rare earth magnet traction motors till September 2026
3 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
NETHERLANDS' TAX PROPOSAL SHOULD WORRY INVESTORS
The Netherlands is now proposing to abandon this principle. Starting in 2028, the Dutch government plans to levy a 36% tax on investment returns, including unrealized gains—the increase in the value of shares, bonds and other assets that investors still hold and have not sold.
2 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
How blood product rules are changing
Centre plans to update India’s regulatory framework for blood products and life-saving medicines derived from human plasma, aligning domestic testing protocols with global standards.
2 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
IIM-A moves Dubai batch to India as war rages in region
Rather than shift classes online, institute moves entire batch to its Ahmedabad campus
2 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
NSE's 20-bank IPO syndicate leaves little room for dissent
National Stock Exchange of India Ltd (NSE) has lined up a record 20 merchant bankers for its initial public offering (IPO), seeking to manage one of India's largest listings while aligning the interests of powerful market participants ahead of the deal.
2 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Iran tests U.S. military might with a guerrilla assault on the global economy
Assam, Kerala, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Puducherry to vote in crucial polls
6 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Are we facing an AI nightmare? Scenario planning should begin
Our best hope is that job losses are minimal and the AI industry doesn't turn oligopolistic but we can't count on this outcome
4 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
How global reporting may pull crypto bets out of the grey zone
India has operationalized a reporting framework aligned with the OECD's Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework
5 mins
March 16, 2026
Mint Kolkata
Shift urged in I-T dept's litigation mechanism
Parliamentary panel has asked the income tax (I-T) department to set up an ‘Expert Litigation Committee’ to vet tax dispute cases before filing appeals at the high courts or Supreme Court, and called for a “paradigm shift” in the department's approach to litigation.
1 min
March 16, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
