October 11, 2019

Flood management: Looking beyond defence strategies

The simultaneous implementation of diversified strategies can help make flood-prone areas more resilient.

3 min read

Floods in the Ganga-Brahmaputra-Barak flood plains have become an annual phenomenon. The scale of the disaster is enormous, dwarfing the menace of floods in many other states. At its peak, the floods affected around 4,600 villages and 57.5 lakh people in Assam and 1,240 villages and 81.6 lakh people in North Bihar. The administration responded with rescue operations and set up relief camps and relief distribution centres. But these do not match the enormity of the disaster. A concerted effort towards flood governance through resilience building is the need of the hour.

There is a discernible pattern in the government’s response to floods: making long-term promises and implementing short-term disbursements. This year, with the floods at their peak, the Assam government reiterated its zeal to work towards a permanent solution to the flooding, including the proposal to form a Northeast water management body. This would be a welcome step, but only if the government takes bold steps to bring in a paradigm shift in flood governance.

Rhinos at a highland during flood at Kaziranga National Park in Bagori range of Nagaon, Assam.

Floods in the Ganga-Brahmaputra-Barak flood plains have become an annual phenomenon. | Picture courtesy: Wikimedia Commons

The discourse of experts on flood management coalesces around flood defence strategies that aim to minimise the probability of flooding through structural interventions such as dams, embankments, bank strengthening works, rivets and spurs, and the dredging of rivers. The demand for dredging of the Brahmaputra to contain floods in Assam, or the proposal to construct a high dam in Nepal to prevent floods in Bihar, is a case in point. But such flood defence strategies have their own challenges.

Other options

Building dams on rivers, which carry huge quantities of silt, might actually be a fruitless exercise. With sub-optimal reservoir management, the dams could enhance the vulnerability of the flood-prone populace through reservoir-induced flooding. Embankments suffer from the ‘build-neglect-rebuild’ syndrome. Unfortunately, they are better known for breaches than for protection. This year, around 24 of 33 districts in Assam have reported damages in embankments.

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Related article: Rethinking our approaches to disaster relief

In Bihar, the data on embankment are missing in the daily reports issued by the disaster management department. While the average weekly rainfall in 12 affected districts in Bihar between July 18 and 24 was mostly deficient, the number of villages and people adversely affected by floods continued to rise. One wonders if the embankments constricted the spread of floods or were aiding the process.

We need to push flood management beyond flood defence strategies, to include flood risk preparation, mitigation, protection, and recovery strategies.

The discourse needs to move away from structural interventions towards the life and the livelihoods of communities residing in recurrent flood-prone areas. An entire gamut of flood risk management strategies needs to be simultaneously implemented through a combination of structural and other kinds of intervention.

This implies investments in health, education, and livelihoods as well as developing roads, culverts, sluice gates on embankments, and embankment rehabilitation. This would push the flood management paradigm beyond flood defence strategies to include flood risk preparation, mitigation, protection, and post-flood recovery strategies.

Such initiatives would require the participation of diverse stakeholders to be successful. If the frequency of high-intensity rainfall rises, embankments might still have an important protective role to play. But this will only be possible if the ‘build-neglect-rebuild’ syndrome gives way to participatory embankment management.

The simultaneous implementation of diversified strategies can lead to resilience building in recurrent flood-prone areas. Only then would populations succeed in resisting the adversities of flooding, absorb and recover from the devastation, and continue to adapt and transform their lives and livelihoods by maximizing the use of available resources.

This article was originally published on The Telegraph.

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ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Abdul Hamid

Abdul Hamid is a senior program manager at Centre for Microfinance and Livelihoods (CML), a Tata Trusts initiative, wherre he leads the Assam initiative. He has a bachelors degree in agriculture engineering and soil science from Assam Agricultural University, Jorhat.

Nirmalya Choudhury-Image
Nirmalya Choudhury

Nirmalya Choudhury is a senior researcher at VikasAnvesh Foundation (VAF). Before VAF, he headed the Centre for Water Policy, Regulation and Governance at Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai. In recent years, he has been working on multiple developmental challenges, vulnerability, and resilience of the people residing in recurrent flood prone areas of Ganga-Brahmaputra basin. He has a doctorate from Technical University Berlin, a post graduate diploma in forest management from IIFM Bhopal, and a masters in economics from Calcutta University.

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