Delhi is burning. Not literally, though at 43.5°C you could be forgiven for thinking the end times are upon us.
But while we roast, British experts have gallantly stepped in to explain why it feels even hotter. How terribly magnanimous of them. One can almost hear the condescending tutting from a thousand miles away.
The explanation, of course, involves humidity, the urban heat island effect, and the fact that Delhi is essentially a concrete cauldron built on the ruins of seven ancient cities. But let us not miss the forest for the trees. The real story here is not the mercury rising but the spectacle of imperial nostalgia dressed up as meteorological consultancy.
Every heatwave is now a global event, analysed by pundits who treat the subcontinent as a petri dish for their theories on climate collapse. It is the Fall of Rome replayed with weather balloons. We are told that Delhi feels hotter because of the 'wet bulb' temperature, a metric that measures the point at which sweat can no longer cool you.
It is a useful statistic, but it is also a reminder that survival in the tropics has become a matter of thermodynamics rather than civilisation. The British, who once ruled this land, now return as experts on its discomfort. They write articles about how their own mild summers are becoming more extreme, but they do so while sipping Pimm's in a garden that was probably designed by a man who never set foot in India.
The hubris is staggering. Meanwhile, Delhi's poor bear the brunt, as they always do. They live in tin-roofed shanties that amplify the heat.
They work on roads that absorb the sun's fury. They die in numbers that would shame Nero. But the British experts do not mention that.
They talk about the 'feels like' temperature, as if the real agony is a matter of perception. No, the real agony is structural. It is the legacy of an urban planning that prioritised boulevards for viceroys over shade for the masses.
It is the failure of a modern state to provide reliable electricity for fans and coolers. It is the global inequality that lets Londoners complain about 30°C while Delhi burns. And yet, we are meant to be grateful for the analysis.
We are supposed to nod along as they explain the dew point. But I say: enough. If you want to understand why Delhi feels hot, look at the history of its colonisation.
Look at the carbon footprint of those who lecture us. Look at the fact that the British experts are probably sitting in air-conditioned studios while we sweat. The heat is not just a weather event.
It is a mirror held up to our collective failure. And the reflection is not pretty.








