The Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) and Down To Earth released the annual State of India's Environment (SOE) 2026 report at the Anil Agarwal Dialogue 2026. The flagship publication warned that seven of the nine planetary boundaries have been breached due to human activities, with ocean acidification becoming the most recent addition. The breached boundaries include climate change, biosphere integrity, land system change, freshwater depletion, biogeochemical flows, novel entities, and ocean acidification. Only stratospheric ozone depletion and atmospheric aerosol loading remain within safe limits. The report highlighted that in 2025, India experienced extreme weather events on 331 out of 334 days, with at least 4,419 people losing their lives and around 17.4 million hectares of cropped land affected. The SOE 2026 edition focuses on themes including floods in a changing climate, poverty, artificial intelligence, depopulation, and youth engagement with the environment. Ecological degradation has also intensified human-tiger conflicts across India. Separately, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) forecasts above-normal heatwave days for April to June 2026, affecting coastal Odisha, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, and isolated regions of Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Karnataka. Northern states including Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Delhi-NCR are also expected to see prolonged heatwave spells with temperatures breaching 46 degrees Celsius in certain areas. The report calls for urgent adaptation planning, expansion of heat action plans to all urban local bodies, and mainstreaming climate resilience in state budgets.