We spoke to agricultural workers from The Locavore’s community of partner producers to understand how heat intersects with labour, especially for working women, and how they cope with rising temperatures.
Scorching summer heat. Above-normal daytime and nighttime temperatures. Heatwaves that bring illnesses and deaths. These are the new normals in India as the climate crisis looms large, the months of April, May, and June becoming increasingly unbearable with every passing year.
Outdoor labourers, especially those working in sectors such as agriculture, animal husbandry, fishing, construction, and quarries and kilns, are at extreme risk from these rising temperatures.
We spoke to some of our #TLpartner producers for International Labour Day 2024 to understand how heat intersects with labour; the toll it takes on agricultural workers, especially women; and how they avoid some of its worst impacts.
This includes Wild Jai Farm based in Gujarat’s biodiverse Gir region; Aamra, which employs local women in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh; Umrani Farms, specialising in indigenous raisin production in Sangli, western Maharashtra; and Dongaon Local, an all-women micro-enterprise based near the Godavari river, straddling Aurangabad and Ahmednagar districts in Maharashtra.
“It is unbearable to step outside between 11 am and 4 pm”









The heat of the chillies is magnified with the high temperatures






“It is around 40 to 42 degrees Celsius in the afternoons. We just adapt to it”



“In the peak afternoons, the winds are hot and harsh. But we need to work for a living”




Mukta Patil is Projects Editor at The Locavore. She works on stories that spotlight the intricacies of our food systems, and how they interact with the climate emergency, the environment, and people. She lives with her cat, Pooki, on the outskirts of Goa.
Know more about Wild Jai Farm, Aamra, Umrani Farms, Dongaon Local, and other partner producers here.
We would like to thank Mallika Chandra, Jahan Jhala, Hamjuben, Jamanbhai, Neeraja Dhorde, Kantabai, Jaya Bajaj, Anita, Nina Patil, and Mahadevi Moili for trusting us with their time, and sharing their experiences with us.
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