Strengthening and Safeguarding Dams in India

dams in india

Syllabus: GS3/Infrastructure; Disaster Management

Context

  • Recently, the Supreme Court of India issued notices to various stakeholders calling for urgent directions to reinforce the aging structure of the 130-year-old Mullaperiyar dam.
Mullaperiyar Dam
– It is a gravity dam built on the Periyar River in the Idukki district of Kerala that was constructed between 1887 and 1895.
– The dam is operated and maintained by Tamil Nadu, under a 999-year lease agreement signed in 1886 between the Maharaja of Travancore and the British government.
– It diverts water to the Vaigai basin in Tamil Nadu for irrigation across 68,558 hectares.

India’s Dam Landscape

  • According to the National Register of Large Dams (NRLD) maintained by the Central Water Commission (CWC), India ranks third globally after China and the United States — in the number of large dams, with over 6,000 operational dams and hundreds more under construction.
  • These dams serve critical functions in irrigation (supporting agriculture across vast regions); hydropower generation; flood control; and drinking water supply.
  • There are concrete gravity dams (e.g., Bhakra Dam), earthen dams (e.g., Banasura Sagar Dam), rock-fill dams, and arch dams (rare in India), based on topography, geology, and hydrological needs.

Why Dam Safety Is Urgent?

  • Aging Infrastructure: Nearly 80% of these dams are over 25 years old, over 1,000 dams are between 50–100 years old, and more than 230 are over a century old.
    • Many were built using outdated engineering standards and are now vulnerable to structural fatigue, sedimentation, and climate-induced stress.
    • It poses serious risks to lives, property, and ecosystems, especially in the face of climate change and extreme weather events.
  • Inconsistent Safety Practices: Dam safety protocols vary across states and agencies, leading to gaps in surveillance, inspection, and maintenance.
    • The Central Government has been working to unify these practices through the Dam Safety Act, 2021, and the creation of the National Dam Safety Authority (NDSA).
  • Risk of Catastrophic Failure: Events like dam collapse due to a glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) underscore the urgency of robust safety protocols.
    • The Supreme Court has repeatedly flagged concerns over dams like Mullaperiyar, warning that a breach could endanger lakhs of lives.

Legal and Institutional Framework

  • Dam Safety Act, 2021: Enacted to ensure surveillance, inspection, operation, and maintenance of dams. It mandates:
    • Hazard classification of dams;
    • Emergency action plans;
    • Periodic safety reviews by independent panels;
    • It mandates the formation of State Committees and National Authority to oversee dam safety.
  • National Dam Safety Authority (NDSA): It coordinates dam safety efforts across states.
    • It maintains the National Register of Large Dams and promotes capacity building, technical standards, and public awareness.
  • State-Level Implementation: States have formed Dam Safety Review Panels and conducted pre- and post-monsoon inspections of thousands of dams.
  • Dam Rehabilitation and Improvement Project (DRIP): It was launched by the CWC with World Bank support. It focuses on rehabilitation of aging dams; improved safety monitoring; and capacity building for dam operators and engineers;
    • DRIP Phase II & III are currently underway, covering over 700 dams across 19 states.
  • Digital Monitoring and Reservoir Management: The Dam Safety Organisation of CWC has launched:
    • Web-based Reservoir Storage Monitoring System;
    • FloodWatch India App for real-time flood alerts and reservoir data.

Strengthening Measures

  • Retrofitting and Rehabilitation: Prioritize structural upgrades for high-risk dams.
  • Use AI & Analytics: Use sensors and real-time data systems to track dam health.
  • Climate Resilience: Update safety norms to account for changing hydrological patterns.
  • Public Awareness and Transparency: Publish safety audits and emergency plans for public scrutiny.

Source: TH

 

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