Reimagining Urban Infrastructure for Flood Resilience

Syllabus: GS2/Governance, GS3/Environment, GS3/Disaster Management

Context

  • The heavy rainfall in Mumbai has once again exposed the vulnerability of Indian cities to urban flooding, highlighting the need to redesign urban infrastructure to absorb rainwater in a climate-resilient manner.

What is Urban Flooding?

  • Urban flooding is defined as a frequent phenomenon in urban areas where water runoff from impermeable surfaces, such as concrete structures, leads to flooding, particularly during prolonged rainfall. 
  • This type of flooding is exacerbated by rapid urban development, poor flood management, and encroachment onto flood-prone areas.

Why Are Indian Cities Vulnerable to Urban Flooding?

  • Disrupted Hydrological Systems: The urban expansion has disrupted natural hydrological networks like rivers, creeks, wetlands, lakes, salt pans, and floodplains that traditionally absorbed rainwater.
  • Loss of Permeable Surfaces: The replacement of open spaces and soil with concrete roads, pavements, and buildings has reduced groundwater recharge and increased surface runoff.
  • Drainage Systems: Many Indian cities are dependent on conventional storm-water drainage systems that are inadequate to handle short-duration but high-intensity rainfall events associated with climate change.
    • In Mumbai, the drainage network largely relies on gravity to discharge water into the sea. 
  • Climate Change: Rising global temperatures have increased the frequency and intensity of extreme rainfall events, making urban flooding more frequent even in cities with improved drainage infrastructure.

Solutions to Mitigate Urban Flooding

  • Upgrading and maintaining stormwater drainage infrastructure.
  • Protecting and restoring wetlands, lakes, and natural waterways.
  • Promoting green infrastructure: rain gardens, green roofs, permeable pavements.
  • Implementing urban planning policies to prevent construction on flood-prone areas.
  • Rainwater harvesting and better solid waste management.

Steps taken by India

  • Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban): While primarily focused on sanitation, this mission also emphasizes solid waste management and pollution control, which contribute to preventing waterlogging and flooding.
  • National Smart Cities Mission: It promotes the measures to manage urban flooding through rainwater harvesting, green spaces and proper drainage system.
  • Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation (AMRUT):The Mission focuses on development of basic infrastructure, in the cities and towns, in the sectors of water supply; sewerage and septage management; storm water drainage.
  • Guidelines and Regulations: The government has issued guidelines for sustainable urban development, encouraging the incorporation of features like permeable pavements, green roofs, and retention ponds to enhance water absorption.
  • The Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs (MoHUA) has formulated Model Building Bye Laws (MBBL), 2016 for the States/UTs.
    • As per MBBL, all buildings having a plot size of 100 sq.m. or more shall mandatorily include the complete proposal of rainwater harvesting.
  • The National Water Policy (2012) advocates that the conservation of rivers, river corridors, water bodies and infrastructure should be undertaken in a scientifically planned manner through community participation.
  • Jal Shakti Abhiyan: It aims to harvest the monsoon rainfall through creation of artificial recharge structures, watershed management, recharge and reuse structures, intensive afforestation and awareness generation.
  • MoHUA has issued Standard Operating Procedures (SoPs) on Urban Flooding in 2017 and published manual on Storm Water Drainage Systems, 2019 to assist the States/ Union Territories (UTs), Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) and other stakeholders

Global Best Practices Related to Mitigating Urban Flooding

  • China’s Sponge City Policy: Following the devastating Beijing floods of 2012, China adopted the Sponge City approach to improve the water retention capacity of urban areas.
  • The Netherlands’ Blue-Green Infrastructure: It is an integrated network of natural and engineered systems that manage rainwater while improving urban resilience and environmental quality.
  • Singapore, a global leader in managing urban flooding despite its high rainfall and dense urban environment.

What are ‘sponge cities’?

  • The term “sponge cities” is used to describe urban areas with abundant natural areas such as trees, lakes and parks or other good design intended to absorb rain and prevent flooding.
  • It is designed to make greater use of lower-impact “nature-based solutions” to better distribute water and improve drainage and storage.
  • It includes the use of permeable asphalt, the construction of new canals and ponds and also the restoration of wetlands, which would not only ease waterlogging, but also improve the urban environment.

Challenges Before Indian Cities

  • Continued encroachment upon wetlands, lakes, and floodplains.
  • Unplanned urbanisation and extensive concretisation.
  • Limited adoption of nature-based solutions in urban planning.
  • Fragmented institutional responsibilities for water and land management.

Way Ahead

  • Integrating natural ecosystems with urban planning is necessary for a sustainable and climate-resilient approach to flood management.
  • Combine engineering solutions, smart planning, real-time tech, and community involvement to build flood-resilient cities will mitigate the concern of Urban Flooding in India.

Source: IE

 

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