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The Damn Floods: Kerala바카라s Monster Monsoon Leaves Us With A Deluge Of Questions

Why does nearly every 바카라natural바카라 disaster hit us on such a scale? What are we doing wrong? Who바카라s guilty? Kerala바카라s monster monsoon leaves us with a deluge of questions.

The Damn Floods: Kerala바카라s Monster Monsoon Leaves Us With A Deluge Of Questions
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Tragedy Is No Lessons Learnt

  • 2001 Gujarat (Bhuj) ­earthquake, around 20,000 casualties
  • 2004 Quake and ­tsunami, over 1,000 killed
  • 2005 Floods in Gujarat and Maharashtra, nearly 5,000 dead
  • 2007 Floods in Bihar, nearly 1,300 deaths
  • 2013 Cloudburst in Uttarakhand, nearly 6,000 deaths
  • 2014 Kashmir floods, 300 deaths
  • 2018 Uttarakhand forest fires, 3,500 hectares burned

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The Deluge. It바카라s just over a week since it hit Kerala. Yes, the scale was epic enough to recall Pauranic and Biblical lore, and the effect profound enough for all of us to revisit our basic ideas about how we live. As the flood waters recede, the freed lands unveil more destruction every day. But the story has gone beyond the human toll, the material devastation, the heroic rescue work, the exhausting social media battles. It바카라s almost as if we have attained the wide-angle perspective of an aerial shot at one of those dams in the Idukki high ranges, bursting at the seams: Nature ­threatening to overwhelm puny human efforts to control and contain her. One look at it and you know. India simply has to reckon with its past follies and prepare for the future. It cannot meet the next disaster like a deer caught in the headlights of an oncoming train.

Cut to Scene 1: a hum of activity. It바카라s CM Pinarayi Vijayan바카라s secretariat in Thiruvananthapuram. There바카라s near-mayhem here, and a precarious order emerging from it. The Communist strongman바카라s all-powerful secretary, former CPI(M) legislator M.V. Jayarajan, is trying to manage the crisis from the top office. With a towel draped over his chair바카라the regulation blue-on-white characteristic of Kerala바카라s officialdom바카라Jayarajan is monitoring television news. His telephone will not stop ringing. Entreaties are pouring in바카라millions are still ­marooned on makeshift 바카라islands바카라, an archipelago of rooftops and ridges. 바카라Our hill stations, our coastal belt, the intermediary areas, all are affected,바카라 says Jayarajan, gloomily. 바카라All 42 dams in the state have been opened as their water level was exceeding capacity. We never expected this to happen.바카라

That last line is the real giveaway. No one ever expects a disaster. It follows, logically, that no one prepares for one. And therein lies the rub. Natural disasters can indeed overpower the best-laid plans of tsars and technocrats. But India바카라s recent history is like a timeline of mega-disasters whose effects could have been largely mitigated. A supercyclone in Odisha. The earthquake in Bhuj. A tsunami all along the coast. A massive cloudburst over glacial Kedarnath. Not to speak of forest fires and periodic droughts, or the floods that torture and paralyse our coastal megacities annually. Or the raging Brahmaputra that routinely fills Assam with woes, and likewise the Kosi in Upper Bihar. The cumulative toll is obscene바카라inching close to a lakh. Add the social dislocation, the economic miseries, the unquantifiable miseries. In each instance, we could have done way better. But we don바카라t.

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Nature바카라s Force

This bridge near Munnar was washed away

Photograph by The New Indian Express

Take Kerala. It바카라s true that it바카라s after a full 113 years that this sliver of a state has seen such waters. It바카라s a state spoilt by monsoons바카라its average annual rainfall of 3,055 mm is five times that of what Haryana gets, and double of what Gangetic Bengal gets. Even a drought here can look like a glut to a visiting northerner. And August here saw 164 per cent excess rainfall. Almost double of Kerala바카라s normal.

The reservoirs in its three main highland river systems바카라Periyar, Pampa and Bharathapuzha바카라filled to the brim. Rivers raged against bridges. Water skidded off a newly-concretised topography in its futile search for a channel to the sea바카라vast paddy lands that were once the recharge zones have all been 바카라reclaimed바카라 in a state that바카라s become an endless housing colony. Soon, stormwater drains, rural canals, ponds, panchayat roads, city promenades, backwaters바카라everything merged to form numerous seas. In coastal parts, even the ocean rushed onshore, creating a perfect storm. Kerala sank in parts. And it was still raining.

You need a Noah in such circumstances. But we have to make do with Indian officialdom. Given the scale of abnormality, after the state government woke to the crisis on August 8, its response mechanisms have largely held up. But the crisis protocol바카라the simple steps to be taken바카라is riddled with greys. Who takes the call? Who coordinates among the multiplicity of authorities that manage something as complex as a dam system? When indeed is a crisis really a crisis?

Depends on what kind of disaster. Cyclones call upon one structure, drought another. When it comes to floods, the key players, are the India Meteorological Department (IMD) and the Central Water Commission (CWC). 바카라The CWC comes up with flood forecasts based on our rainfall forecasts,바카라 says Mrutyunjay Mohapatra, dir­ector of forecasting at the IMD. In Uttarakhand바카라s 2013 flash floods, the state government had failed to take note of early warnings from the IMD. But in 2018, this basic structure바카라the IMD and CWC as first informants바카라appears to have failed Kerala.

The Kerala government바카라s first response was to open the sluicegates of every dam in the state. Any more sustained pressure on the dams could have been disastrous. This too was a story filled with snafus. Cheruthoni is a dam within the Idukki system바카라the name literally means a 바카라small boat바카라. On August 8-9, its gates were opened as a trial run바카라to see how much water could be safely let out. Officials found that a district panchayat bus stop had been built in the way of the old river바카라s course in the years it had been blocked. 바카라We had to remove it with a bulldozer,바카라 a district official says. The trial was a flop: because of heavy rains, officials could not get the gates to close again. (Two of its five gates are still open.)

Once the dams opened, stored water merged with the already rain-flooded landscape. In this most densely populated state, even minor events can trigger disproportionate losses. So incessant rains, bursting dams and the sea together wreaked havoc on farmland and factory, home and office, hill and flatland alike. A rapid estimate: Rs 19,512 crore losses in major sectors.

Read Also: Noah바카라s Park

바카라Kerala will have to be rebuilt,바카라 Jayarajan admits. Around the Sphinx-like Pinarayi, the sceptical silence and solidarity the Opposition was offering till now is beginning to vanish. They now want a judicial inquiry to determine the exact sequence of events. It바카라s the usual questions. When did Kerala receive alerts about rising water levels? When were the decisions taken to release dam water? And so on. We have the usual deflections too. 바카라I will talk about this later. We are in the midst of a crisis right now,바카라 state electricity minister M.M. Mani tells Outlook.

A National Disaster?

Questions could, in fact, be asked of just about any disaster in the past decade. The essential question that cropped up with the floods in Kashmir, or the periodic ones in Chennai, Mumbai and Guwahati: how much of the devastation is man-made? Or specific ones: should dam water, say in Kerala or Chennai 2015, have been released gradually, easing the pressure, instead of stocking up till the last in our resource-scarce mentality and suddenly waking to a crisis? Kerala had already seen record-­breaking precipitation before the dams were opened. Was the coming deluge from the skies not forecast properly? Were the forecasts not disseminated well enough? Or is Kerala only a symptom of a collective failure바카라of meteorological authorities, disaster managers, planners, state and Centre, being unable to act in concert?

One key presence바카라and often, curious absence바카라here is that of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), the apex body responsible for disaster management in India, whose terms of reference include preparation for and mitigation of disasters as well as rescue and relief. For the record, they speak all the pat lines. 바카라There바카라s never a coordination problem between the Centre and states during disasters,바카라 says NDMA member R.K. Jain. At the moment, the NDMA is at the forefront of coordinating relief for Kerala. Its ground troops, the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), have been mobilised in the largest-ever numbers바카라58 companies (or roughly 2,320 men) were deployed early this week. One could take from this a sense of well-oiled efficiency. But the reality is way, way fuzzier.

A full week바카라s gap바카라that바카라s what separates Kerala바카라s first suo motu crisis response on August 8 to the time the NDMA came into the picture. For reasons unknown, it was made to join the Centre바카라s discussions on tackling the catastrophe only on August 15. 바카라That evening, it was decided there would be a National Crisis Management Committee (NCMC) meeting the next day. We have met every day, sometimes twice, since then,바카라 says Jain. (It바카라s a well-rounded, power-packed congregation: top political representatives from the health, communications, power, defence and home ministries, chiefs of coast guard and other military outfits and senior NDMA representatives. But the NDMA has not had a vice-chairperson since 2014 and only an ex-officio chairman in the prime minister바카라in short, India바카라s nodal disaster management agency has been functionally headless for four years.)

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Recovery

A house being cleaned as the water level recedes

Photograph by The New Indian Express

Suspicions that something went wrong underlies the Opposition바카라s demand for a probe. 바카라We are legally bound to provide assistance only at the state government바카라s request,바카라 says Jain, tiptoeing cautiously around the key question. 바카라We cannot say Kerala did not ask for assistance on time. But the responsibility for responding to disasters lies with state governments.바카라 But first, a closer look at what unfolded on August 8바카라as we said, a full week before the NCMC first met.

Each Boat To Its Own

On the intervening night of August 7-8 in Kochi, Sudhesh Kumar, ADGP in charge of coastal security, happened to be handling a search-and-rescue operation after a ship had hit a boat. There was no official word till now, but he noticed it. 바카라I could see what was happening,바카라 he says. 바카라The rainfall was intense and the sea level was visibly rising.바카라 Having been around a bit바카라a UN stint and a key role in setting up the NDMA바카라Sudesh could recognise a coming catastrophe when he sees one. And he was seeing one.

바카라I informed the DGP of the rising wat­ers. He immediately made me nodal offi­cer for rescue, with the Kerala Police in the lead. We were soon joined by other forces,바카라 he says. Within 24 hours, 400 boats were mobilised from fishermen, becoming the backbone of the rescue ops. 바카라Fishermen volunteered to help too,바카라 he says. In the absence of word from a central disaster forecasting and response mechanism, local intelligence acted on its own. By then, disaster was already at the doorstep.

How exactly would things have been different had the NDMA and its command structure come into play earlier? Here, Cyclone Phailin offers a textbook illustration. That was the last disaster handled by an NDMA with a functioning head, back in Odisha in 2013. 바카라We successfully evacuated 10 lakh people, double our target of 5 lakh,바카라 says M. Shashidhar Reddy, the last NDMA vice-chairperson. 바카라That means there has been lack of preparedness in Kerala바카라s case.바카라

Until Reddy바카라s term바카라December 2010 to June 2014바카라the NDMA vice-chairperson enjoyed the rank of a cabinet minister; its members that of ministers of state. The Modi government made the vice-chairperson바카라s post equivalent to that of a cabinet secretary. 바카라If a crisis is not tackled from the highest levels, it can바카라t be handled effectively in India,바카라 says Reddy, who has since joined the Congress. 바카라You end up handling a big catastrophe as a 바카라local event바카라. With these changes in ranks and by not appointing a vice-chairperson, the NDA government has downgraded the NDMA.바카라

Look back at Phailin. Only 24 hours before the cyclone바카라s landfall, Odisha was lagging seriously behind with eva­cuations. 바카라It바카라s only when I directly contacted the chief ­secretary that it really picked up,바카라 says Reddy. 바카라Otherwise, international agencies had predicted 10,000 deaths, like in the 1999 cyclone. Cabinet rank cuts through red tape and helps access top officials directly바카라a necessity during disasters.바카라

There바카라s also enabling law: Section 6 of the Disaster Management Act allows the NDMA to 바카라take such other measures바카라 to prevent or mitigate threatening disaster situations 바카라as it may consider necessary바카라. This means it can order forcible evacuation if it deems the crisis serious enough. For, paradoxically, people in a danger zone can be extremely unwilling to leave their home and belongings. In Odisha, once a clear word went through, police even fished out elderly village folks hiding in inner rooms or lurking in the woods behind their houses! Thus, 10 lakh were vacuumed out and countless lives saved.

As a study in contrast is Kerala바카라s story of bottom-up grit: heroic, but not enough. The state police chief, Lokanath Behera, recounts the sequence of events:  바카라After incessant rains on August 8, we were rattled. Police stations were unable to handle the flood of distress calls. We had no order or instructions to go by. We decided to go suo motu. We put 15,000 policemen on rescue ops along with other officials. Men were added as the situation worsened, until 40,000 pairs of boots were on the ground. Most police stations were emptied of staff as the flood took precedence. We did not have helicopters, but we have local knowledge바카라this saved many lives.바카라

People in relief camps that Outlook visited admitted police made evacuation announcements on loudspeakers in villages. Plenty refused to leave. They were still stranded and begging from rooftops for drinking water when Outlook visited the areas on a police rescue truck on Tuesday. Signs of a systemic failure for Reddy. 바카라The Disaster Management Act authorises them to take any measure바카라including force바카라because evacuation is about saving lives,바카라 Reddy says.

Bipolar Weather?

Not everything is in human control. One reason why human systems need to be in top form is the extreme variance in weather patterns of late. Consider the irony that, just this March, nine out of Kerala바카라s 14 districts were officially declared drought-hit. These include hilly Idukki, where the mighty Periyar originates and where 44 have died so far in August. Damned by dearth, Idukki is now damned by overabundance.

바카라For the past two years, Kerala was deficient in rainfall,바카라 says Mohapatra, wryly. And this month, the gates of the Idukki reservoir had to be opened for the first time in 26 years as they threatened to overspill. This reservoir is one of Kerala바카라s most ambitious hydro-power sites. Among Asia바카라s highest arch dams, it rises to 169 metres, towering over surrounding regions바카라imagine a building 56 stories high, wide as the sea, and filled with as much water. Built across the Periyar, it has a 780 MW capacity and is critical to Kerala바카라s growing power demand.

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Relief

A volunteer brings bread to a stranded family

Photograph by AP

This is the other twist in the tale of conflicting, overlapping authorities. The electricity board regulates the water levels in dams바카라states simply tend to view this from the prism of harnessable electricity. Letting water out from dams is like letting go of power output바카라or rather, like throwing away firewood. And power insufficiency has unpleasant social, political, industrial and environmental consequences, as we all know. 바카라Thus, state electricity departments always try to keep their dams full,바카라 says Avinash Mishra, joint advisor (water) at Niti Aayog.

Another central government official, requesting anonymity, says: 바카라This issue relates to all states. Nobody wants to stick their neck out. They don바카라t follow technical advice about when to open or close the floodgates.바카라

There바카라s reason behind this conservatism: dams take care of a variety of needs, ranging from electricity to irrigation, drinking water and industrial uses. 바카라Reservoir managers are very conservative because to release or hold water in reservoirs is not a simple or binary choice. They must weigh a range of factors: what if they release water and a dry spell occurs, leaving no water to drink? This is partly dictated by the fact that seasonal variation in rainfall is very high,바카라 says another NDMA official.

Pioneering water conservationist Rajendra Kumar, who has been described as the 바카라Waterman of India바카라, completes the logic. 바카라Drought and flood are two sides of the same coin,바카라 he says. This has a strong bearing on the Kerala story; but first, to emphasise the scale of the crisis, consider faraway Bundelkhand. This region that straddles UP and Madhya Pradesh is a prime illustration of schizoid weather바카라droughts alternating with floods in very quick succession.

The pattern, visible across the country, has an inner cycle of its own. First, rain erodes soil, which settles down in rivers, thrusting its waters upward and outward, creating a classic flood. Drought, on the other hand, hits those lands that have lost topsoil to this erosion. In Bundelkhand, 2016 saw a flood and a drought within two months.

Can we put figures on this bipolarity in weather patterns? A series of papers on 바카라Observed Climate Variability and Change바카라 (2016) published in Springers바카라 Geography examined rainfall patterns from 1901 to 2010 to find higher frequency of dry days during winter, pre-monsoon and southwest monsoon seasons, besides significant decreases in very light and light-to-moderate rains. Their most significant observation is the rise in incidence of 바카라very heavy to extremely heavy rainfall바카라­바카라precipitation patterns have changed so the amount of rain earlier received over 75 days now lands over just 45 days across India.

Travel further north, to Kashmir, and find a different part of the pattern. After the September 2014 floods that killed 300 people and damaged over 2.5 lakh houses in the Valley, the Centre embarked upon flood management of the Jhelum river. This involved 바카라dredging바카라바카라scooping up the erosion deposited in the river to make room for more water. The river has thus almost doubled in carrying cap­acity. So far so good?

Not really. Ghulam Rasool Shah, exe­cutive engineer, irrigation and flood control, tells us why. In a recent meeting chaired by (former) Governor N.N. Vohra바카라s advisor Khurshid Ganai, several engineers said the project harmed the river. It has weakened its embankments. Why? Because, instead of silt, the company awarded the dredging project fished out profit-making sand. In the process, the river바카라s geology changed. 바카라This will have consequences,바카라 a flood control official warns. At Batwara, near the Badamibagh cantonment in Srinagar, residents fear the embankments are so weak, they will be breached at the slightest increase in water levels.

More signs of bipolarity and its reasons come from Karnataka. Districts to the northeast of Kerala, including Kodagu and Mysore, are being battered by rainfall at present. Meanwhile, Bidar and Kalaburgi to the north are drought-like. 바카라No doubt we got excess rainfall this year, but it would have been beneficial if only we had managed the Cauvery basin catchment area,바카라 says T.V. Ramachandra of the Centre for Ecological Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore.

Ramachandra was part of Karnataka바카라s Western Ghats Task Force, for which his ongoing study of the Cauvery basin has some startling findings: only 17-18 per cent forest cover and large-scale deforestation. 바카라This is a tragedy,바카라 he says. Tragic because regions with native vegetation intact can carry water all year unlike streams passing through monoculture plantations, which carry only for 6-8 months. This is why many say the des­truction in Kodagu was something foretold and the blame falls on changes in land-use over the years. In short, Kodagu should wake up and smell the coffee.

In a catchment area, native vegetation allows percolation of water by at least 40-50 per cent바카라only 50 per cent goes over-ground. In monoculture plantations, only 20 or 25 per cent goes into the underlying layers. Barren areas, of course, spell flash floods.

Environmentalist Madhav Gadgil, whose report on the Western Ghats ecology was ignored by Kerala and its neighbours, now questions afresh the current model of development. 바카라At the height of the Kerala model, it was admired as it involved people right down to panchayats planning resource use. That model was thrown away maybe at least 20-25 years back. Now there바카라s blatant flouting of laws,바카라 he says. 바카라Climate scientists are in consensus that extreme weather events are likely to become much more frequent and intense. The combination is deadly.바카라

The shambolic ways of officialdom increases the risks manifold. Aamir Ali, director of J&K바카라s Disaster Management Authority, speaks of the inadequate equipment they labour under. The government has only acquired 40 boats to prepare for the next flood, he concedes. But there바카라s more. An official, unnamed in the best traditions, paints the picture for us: and it could be a metaphor for all of India. The Srinagar battalion of the disaster response force has only around 600 personnel, which is already less. 바카라Almost 75 per cent of the battalion is over 40,바카라 says the official. 바카라And when they were taken for swimming tests, most failed.바카라 Noah, anyone?

By Thufail P.T. in Kerala and Pragya Singh and Siddhartha Mishra in New Delhi with Lola Nayar in New Delhi, Ajay Sukumaran in Bangalore and Naseer Ganai in Srinagar

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