The Japan Times - In India, heat-triggered insurance offers 'some relief'

EUR -
AED 4.250976
AFN 73.516596
ALL 95.02053
AMD 425.09822
ANG 2.072484
AOA 1062.598761
ARS 1658.175728
AUD 1.64396
AWG 2.083527
AZN 1.964472
BAM 1.956712
BBD 2.323583
BDT 141.90617
BGN 1.932957
BHD 0.435399
BIF 3438.803488
BMD 1.157515
BND 1.486512
BOB 7.971717
BRL 5.902972
BSD 1.153638
BTN 110.417441
BWP 15.657436
BYN 3.184171
BYR 22687.288912
BZD 2.320272
CAD 1.618773
CDF 2654.181159
CHF 0.921151
CLF 0.026663
CLP 1049.379422
CNY 7.84361
CNH 7.826032
COP 4054.091202
CRC 526.652399
CUC 1.157515
CUP 30.674141
CVE 110.31644
CZK 24.178573
DJF 205.435793
DKK 7.474282
DOP 67.602106
DZD 154.281985
EGP 60.164952
ERN 17.362721
ETB 184.449531
FJD 2.565518
FKP 0.868019
GBP 0.863101
GEL 3.067391
GGP 0.868019
GHS 12.862998
GIP 0.868019
GMD 83.927041
GNF 10105.712217
GTQ 8.794101
GYD 241.292513
HKD 9.069817
HNL 30.940276
HRK 7.532881
HTG 150.792267
HUF 352.858528
IDR 20617.652556
ILS 3.381043
IMP 0.868019
INR 109.953772
IQD 1516.34431
IRR 1592740.283034
ISK 143.809743
JEP 0.868019
JMD 182.52511
JOD 0.820693
JPY 185.303003
KES 149.851327
KGS 101.22524
KHR 4646.186551
KMF 493.101411
KPW 1041.595715
KRW 1757.165167
KWD 0.356885
KYD 0.961448
KZT 563.442729
LAK 25396.732601
LBP 103311.226982
LKR 384.45927
LRD 209.967906
LSL 19.056404
LTL 3.41784
LVL 0.700169
LYD 7.369436
MAD 10.708458
MDL 20.085279
MGA 4868.507242
MKD 61.731382
MMK 2429.449528
MNT 4143.234593
MOP 9.312744
MRU 45.860952
MUR 54.692116
MVR 17.883483
MWK 2000.55877
MXN 19.920713
MYR 4.695458
MZN 73.976498
NAD 19.056486
NGN 1573.433014
NIO 42.388096
NOK 11.060574
NPR 176.667905
NZD 1.986214
OMR 0.445063
PAB 1.153638
PEN 3.936647
PGK 5.066153
PHP 70.107205
PKR 321.041773
PLN 4.247442
PYG 7087.304757
QAR 4.219717
RON 5.236245
RSD 117.343094
RUB 83.641275
RWF 1694.189988
SAR 4.345715
SBD 9.312996
SCR 16.282877
SDG 695.08632
SEK 10.927344
SGD 1.485821
SHP 0.864202
SLE 28.43962
SLL 24272.507785
SOS 661.520137
SRD 43.218705
STD 23958.218113
STN 24.511747
SVC 10.094707
SYP 127.942532
SZL 19.052048
THB 37.828783
TJS 10.758016
TMT 4.045514
TND 3.378211
TOP 2.787017
TRY 53.546513
TTD 7.839656
TWD 36.620878
TZS 3038.404452
UAH 51.842222
UGX 4349.027919
USD 1.157515
UYU 46.60173
UZS 13855.460697
VES 673.624778
VND 30452.476548
VUV 138.692206
WST 3.180851
XAF 656.26301
XAG 0.017278
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.128241
XCG 2.079214
XDR 0.816188
XOF 656.26301
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.185836
ZAR 18.832724
ZMK 10419.022427
ZMW 19.929293
ZWL 372.719274
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.3

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    2.3500

    70.66

    +3.33%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    24.57

    -0.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.35

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.5500

    17.04

    +3.23%

  • RIO

    4.5800

    103.64

    +4.42%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.83

    -0.23%

  • NGG

    1.1400

    81.52

    +1.4%

  • RELX

    -0.8700

    33.11

    -2.63%

  • VOD

    0.2100

    15.26

    +1.38%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    61.39

    +0.44%

  • GSK

    1.6900

    52.86

    +3.2%

  • AZN

    3.3200

    182.28

    +1.82%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    42.68

    -0.63%

In India, heat-triggered insurance offers 'some relief'
In India, heat-triggered insurance offers 'some relief' / Photo: Shammi MEHRA - AFP

In India, heat-triggered insurance offers 'some relief'

Clothes seller Lata Solanki used to face a devastating choice when India's summer heat hit dangerous levels: risk her health going door-to-door for sales, or lose her income?

Text size:

But now the 42-year-old is part of an insurance scheme that pays out when temperatures hit a threshold, so she can stay home without jeopardising her finances.

The "parametric" model pays out automatically when specific triggers are breached, in Solanki's case after two consecutive days at 43.72 degrees Celsius.

The payout is modest, but it helps, she told AFP in Ahmedabad, one of India's hottest cities.

"At least we feel there is some support," she said. "Because of the heat, the fan runs day and night. The bill goes up."

In 2023, the year before she joined the scheme, Solanki kept working during a heatwave and ended up sick at home for 20 days, losing at least 2,000 rupees ($21) in income.

The following year, she received 750 rupees from the scheme, small but more than the cost of the premium, and a relief in a country where the average monthly rural household income is 10,000 rupees ($105).

India lost an estimated 247 billion hours of labour to extreme heat in 2024, equivalent to nearly $194 billion in economic losses, according to the Lancet Countdown research group.

Agriculture and construction bore the brunt, and climate change is accelerating the number of days of extreme heat India sees.

Parametric insurance is seen as a way to protect the most vulnerable from climate impacts like heat, but also heavy rain.

In India's northeastern state of Nagaland, the government has insured its entire population against economic losses due to heavy rainfall under a parametric model since 2024.

The federal government is examining how to extend the schemes more widely to "supplement insurance mechanisms and reinforce protection to the people".

- 'Some relief' -

Unlike traditional insurance, parametric policies do not require individual damage assessments.

Instead, payouts are triggered automatically by heavy rain, high heat or even air pollution.

The scheme helping Solanki is a collaboration between the non-profit Mahila Housing Trust (MHT) and global insurer Go Digit, supported by the Climate Resilience for All initiative.

MHT programme manager Nital Rahul Patel said the idea emerged after surveys and discussions with women workers in Ahmedabad, where temperatures sometimes hit 45C (113F).

"They would say it is very hot every year," she said. "But when we broke down their expenses, we realised incomes were falling by 2,000-2,500 rupees ($21-26) over four months of summer."

The scheme began in 2024 with 26,000 women across Gujarat. Their 354-rupee premium was covered by Climate Resilience for All.

In 2025 enrolment rose, but the scheme made no payments because the temperature threshold was not met.

This year, the trigger has been revised down to 42.74 degrees Celcius, and the scheme aims to cover more than 30,000 women.

If temperatures hit the threshold for two days, they will qualify for payments ranging from 850 to 2,000 rupees ($21).

Higher temperatures trigger higher payments, but the amount is a one-off, not cumulative. It is assessed and paid at the end of the heat season in September.

Rakhi Gulshan Singh, a seamstress earning around 4,000 rupees a month, signed up even though she works indoors.

"When I run the sewing machine, it becomes even hotter," the 30-year-old said, who got a payout in 2024. "It is small, but it gives some relief."

- 'Faster and more transparent' -

Adarsh Agarwal, appointed actuary at Go Digit, said his company has covered more than 50,000 people since it began working on parametric insurance two years ago.

While still a "niche product", he said demand has increased.

There is now "more knowledge and more curiosity", he told AFP, and his firm has offered both heat and air-quality parametric schemes.

Payment thresholds are set based on historical weather data and intended to be "practical, sustainable and aligned to the intended segment while managing basis risk", he added.

The schemes can be "faster and more transparent" than traditional insurance, said Aniruddha Bhattacharjee, senior researcher for climate resilience and engineering at Climate Trends.

But payouts tend to be small, and effectiveness depends on how accurately trigger thresholds reflect actual ground realities, since models are largely built on historical data.

India's government weather forecasters are already predicting boiling, above-average temperatures in May and June, which Solanki joked might turn out to be good news.

"Maybe we will get a payout," she said.

But regardless, she plans to stay enrolled "even if it means paying the premium from our pockets".

T.Sato--JT