Scaling Climate-Resilient Housing Solutions Across India's Informal and Formal Urban Settlements

Partnerships for co-creation of knowledge and research
Empower cities to act, raise ambition, and scale implementation
Knowledge-sharing on a specific topic, method, and/or output
Awareness-raising on a specific topic, method, and/or output

PRERANA LANGA

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

23 Jun | 11:50–12:15
organization
AGA KHAN AGENCY FOR HABITAT INDIA
country
India
Reference: 
CR1-07
Housing and Infrastructure
Insight to Impact (Research and Practice) (60-minute session)
Conference room 1 (CR1)

Summary

Urban housing systems globally are critical sites of climate vulnerability and emissions mitigation, with buildings contributing 37% of energy-related carbon emissions and cooling demand projected to triple by 2050 (UNEP, 2023; IEA, 2018). India exemplifies this condition. Its housing stock spans informal settlements excluded from climate investment and formal housing lacking accessible retrofit pathways. Indoor temperatures in informal settlements reach 36–38°C, while rising air-conditioning adoption is increasing energy demand and emissions in formal housing. Policy responses remain focused on redevelopment, displacing residents and failing to address existing heat stress.


This session presents two case studies in Mumbai. Passive cooling retrofits across 110 informal households reduced indoor temperatures by 2–5°C without permits, enabled through community governance. In a 280-household cooperative, EDGE-certified retrofits achieved 41% energy savings and 232.78 tCO₂ reduction at $210 per household. The findings demonstrate that climate resilience can be achieved through in-situ retrofitting, offering scalable pathways for Global South cities.

Partners

Organization
Country
AGA KHAN AGENCY FOR HABITAT INDIA
India

Session panelists

Panelist
Role
Organization
Country
Prerana Langa
Chief Executive Officer
AGA KHAN AGENCY FOR HABITAT INDIA
India
Page Navigation