India‘s government is deploying artificial intelligence and satellite technology to map urban heat vulnerability at the building level, with organizations like SEEDS, a Delhi-based disaster-preparedness nonprofit, and Microsoft developing models that can assess indoor heat risk for individual structures. This granular approach addresses a critical gap in current heat action plans, which fail to target relief efforts to the most vulnerable populations during deadly heat waves that regularly push temperatures above 45°C (113°F).
The big picture: Traditional heat action plans operate at city-wide scales, missing crucial variations in heat exposure that can differ by up to 9°C within the same neighborhood based on building materials, density, and green cover.
How the AI system works: The Sunny Lives model, developed by SEEDS and Microsoft, combines satellite imagery with machine learning to identify building types and predict indoor temperatures.
Why this matters: Current heat action plans cover 95% of India without detailed mapping of heat-prone areas or vulnerable populations, according to a 2023 study, making it impossible to allocate resources effectively.
Key implementation challenges: Heat action plans aren’t legally binding in most Indian states, and heat waves aren’t recognized as official disasters eligible for federal funding.
What researchers are proposing: Ward-level heat action plans that can address micro-climate variations and target specific vulnerable populations.
The technical breakthrough: Researchers at ATREE, a nonprofit research organization, found temperature differences of up to 9°C within a single two-square-kilometer ward in Bengaluru, demonstrating how building density, materials, and green cover create heat islands at the block level.
What they’re saying: “The same temperature doesn’t impact everyone the same way, and our planning has to reflect that,” says Anshu Sharma, cofounder of SEEDS.
Looking ahead: India has existing funding pathways through 18 centrally sponsored schemes that could support long-term heat resilience, but awareness among local officials remains low, requiring large-scale capacity building as the country faces increasingly severe heat waves.