27/04/2026
Across recent months, every credible report has pointed to the same reality—temperatures rising beyond historical comfort, seasons losing predictability, and heat no longer remaining a regional phenomenon but a structural condition.
This is not something confined to data. It is being lived.
In the course of my professional travel, particularly across the southern regions of India for court matters, I have experienced a level of heat that is not only unfamiliar but deeply unsettling. Places that once carried a degree of climatic balance now reflect an intensity that was earlier unthinkable. This is not anecdotal exaggeration—it is a pattern.
Years ago, I articulated a conceptual position which I termed the “Privacy of Nature.” At the time, it appeared philosophical. Today, it appears necessary.
The core of this concept is simple yet demanding:
Nature possesses an inherent domain of internal functioning—cycles, thresholds, and balances—which are not designed for continuous human interference. Just as privacy in jurisprudence protects integrity against intrusion, ecological systems require a similar recognition of boundaries.
What we are witnessing in the form of extreme heat is not merely climatic fluctuation. It is the visible outcome of prolonged intrusion—industrial expansion, unregulated extraction, and a persistent assumption that every natural system is available for manipulation.
Current sustainability discourse, including ESG frameworks, has made important progress in accountability and reporting. Yet, much of it still operates within a paradigm of management rather than restraint. Measurement without limitation risks becoming compliance without correction.
If ESG is to retain credibility, it must evolve from reporting impact to reducing intrusion. Governance must recognize thresholds. Sustainability must incorporate non-interference. Environmental responsibility must move beyond mitigation toward respect for ecological boundaries.
The “Privacy of Nature” offers that shift. It does not oppose development. It defines its limits. It does not resist progress. It disciplines its direction.
The rising heat is not an isolated crisis. It is a signal—clear, cumulative, and difficult to ignore. It reflects that boundaries once unseen have been crossed, and systems once resilient are now under strain.
The question before us is no longer whether we can adapt to rising temperatures. The more fundamental question is whether we are prepared to reconsider the extent of our intrusion.
The time has come to move this concept from thought to practice.
Respect for nature cannot remain a narrative. It must become a principle that informs policy, guides enterprise conduct, and shapes legal thinking.
Because ultimately, the sustainability of human systems is inseparable from the integrity of natural ones.
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