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Hill or city, urban planning cannot be an afterthought

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    Hill or city, urban planning cannot be an afterthought

    Land subsidence:

    • It is the sinking of the ground because of underground material movement.
    • Subsidence can be caused by gradual settling or sudden sinking of the Earth’s surface
    • Land subsidence incidents in hilly urban India are becoming increasingly common. About 12.6% of India’s
      land area is estimated to be prone to landslides, especially in Sikkim, West Bengal.
    • According to the National Institute of Disaster Management, Urban policy is making this worse.
      Construction in such a landscape is often driven by building bye-laws that ignore local geologic and
      environmental factors.

    Examples:

    • Land use planning in India’s Himalayan towns and the Western Ghats is often ill-conceived.It adds to slope
      instability. As a result, landslide vulnerability has risen.It has been made worse by tunnelling construction
      that is weakening rock formations.
    • Flood risks– Planned townships are approved, with a distinct lack of concerns for natural hazards. Townships
      are built on river floodplains.
    • In Delhi, an estimated 9,350 households live in the Yamuna floodplains. The UN Intergovernmental Panel on
      Climate Change report of March 2022 has highlighted the risk Kolkata faces due to a rise in sea levels.
    • The combination of poor urban planning and climate change will mean that many of India’s cities could face
      devastating flooding.Way forward:
    • Acquiring credible data is the first step toward enhancing urban resilience with regard to land subsidence.
      The overall landslide risk needs to be mapped at the granular level.
    • The Geological Survey of India has conducted a national mapping exercise. Urban policymakers need to take
      this further, with additional detail and localisation.
    • Areas with high landslide risk should not be allowed to expand large infrastructure. There is a need to
      reduce human interventions and adhere to carrying capacity.
    • Flood-proofing India’s cities will require multiple measures. Urban planners will have to step back from
      filling up water bodies, canals and drains.
    • The focus should be on enhancing sewerage and storm water drain networks. Existing sewerage networks
      need to be reworked and expanded to enable wastewater drainage in low-lying urban geographies.
    • Rivers that overflow need to be desilted regularly along with a push for coastal walls in areas at risk from sea
      rise.
    • Greater spending on flood-resilient architecture like river embankments, flood shelters in coastal areas and
      flood warning systems are necessary.
    • There is a need to protect “blue infra” areas. Examples are places that act as natural sponges for absorbing
      surface runoff, allowing groundwater to be recharged.Conclusion:
    • Urban master plans need to consider the impact of climate change and extreme weather;
    • Urban authorities in India should assess and update disaster risk and preparedness planning.
    • Early warning systems will also be critical.
    • Each city needs to have a disaster management framework in place, with large arterial roads that allow
      people and goods to move freely.

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