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South Asia's intense heat wave a 'sign of things to come'

The devastating heat wave which has baked India and Pakistan in recent months was made more likely due to climate change, according to an international group of scientists. This, they say, is a glimpse of what the future holds for the region.

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South Asias intense heat wave a sign of things to come

The city has also been trying to "cool" roofs by experimenting with various materials absorb heat differently.

Their aim is to build roofs that'll reflect the sun and bring down indoor temperatures by using white, reflective paint or cheaper materials like dried grass, said Dr. Dileep Mavalankar, who heads the Indian Institute of Public Health in western Indian city Gandhinagar and helped design the 2013 plan.

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South Asias intense heat wave a sign of things to come

Most Indian cities are less prepared and India's federal government is now working with 130 cities in 23 heat wave-prone states across India for them to develop similar plans.

Earlier this month, the federal government also asked states to sensitize health workers on managing heat-related illnesses and ensure that ice packs, oral rehydration salts, and cooling appliances in hospitals were available.

But Mavalankar, who wasn't part of the study, pointed to the lack of government warnings in newspapers or TV for most Indian cities and said that local administrations had just not "woken up to the heat."