Tuesday 17 November 2015

NATURE'S FURY -- CHENNAI DROWNED

We do not have any respect, let alone reverence, for the world of nature because we do not fundamentally have any respect, let alone reverence, for ourselves.
It is because we have lost the sense of our own reality that we have lost the sense of every other reality as well.
n  Phillip Sherrard

It was a virtual deluge. And the city of Chennai went down under. There was water everywhere. The clouds had opened up. The clogged drains were overflowing. The roads were flooding...

It was as if Mother Nature, repeatedly and systematically subjected to gang rape by mankind, was asserting in no uncertain terms that she was infinitely more powerful than man. It was a reinforcement of the known, but conveniently forgotten, fact that man, with all his technical resources and sophisticated gadgetry, was as helpless as an unattended toddler in the woods when she unleashed her fury...

The 15th and 16th of November 2015 was the morbid statistician’s delight. 71 die due to rain havoc said one. Highest single day rainfall in two decades, said another. Cyclone ravages to continue for two more days, screamed a third...

Chennai was not the only affected territory in Tamilnadu. Days earlier, another cyclone had battered Cuddalore to the extent that the demarcation between “kadal” (sea) and “ooru” (land) was obliterated and the region became one continuous sheet of water.

Power was switched off in many water-logged places as a precautionary measure. Boats were pressed into service in the heart of the city to convey people to safety. Police and fire department personnel waded through hip-level, often chest level water helping the aged, the women and the children to high grounds. With water flooding the ground floors of several apartment complexes, the denizens climbed upwards to the higher floors, leaving the furniture, refrigerators and computers to be ravaged by the flood waters. Water snakes, scorpions and millipedes made their way into households along with rats and bandicoots. While clear rainwater gushed through the otherwise filthy Cooum, stinking sewage overflowed into households spreading the fear of water-borne diseases...

The State Government’s disaster management system worked with seamless efficiency and within hours of the rains stopping, most of the water had been drained out and the process of restoration of power was on in a phased manner, while a set of officials went about surveying the affected areas and assessing the damage.

But having said that, the Government also has to shoulder the blame for it poor state of preparedness for the annual monsoon fury. Tamilnadu is almost totally dependent on the North-East Monsoon for its annual requirement of water. And the NE Monsoon is traditionally notorious for its cyclonic weather. Every year two or three cyclonic storms hit the coastal regions of the state. And the water these bring in their wake takes care of the needs of the people – daily consumption, agriculture and industry.

Every year, by the end of a torrid summer, the state gets starved of water. The water level in reservoirs start receding. Indiscriminate mining of sand from river beds have rendered most of the rivers in the state bone dry. In most rivers, the rocky bottoms stand exposed and when it rains, the water just flows away into the sea without percolating into the soil. Most village-level ponds and lakes have been encroached upon to construct dwellings. The few ponds and lakes that have managed to survive have not been de-silted or deepened in years and have become shallow. Their floors are hardened; and when the rains do come, the rain water does not percolate down to recharge to sub soil aquifers. On the contrary, the water stagnates and very soon overflows, causing flooding of the neighbouring areas. The green cover over vast areas, which had caused localised condensation of moisture causing welcome summer rains have all vanished.

Even in the city of Chennai, with its winding open gutter which answers to the name Cooum, riverbank encroachments, not just by impoverished slum dwellers but by educational institutions and even apartment complexes continues unabated with the tacit approval of the authorities. Barring the rain water harvesting scheme ushered in by the Jayalalithaa-led AIADMK regime about a decade ago, no worthwhile system has been put in place in the state for effective water management. As a result, when it rains, it floods. When it does not rain, the state is gripped by drought!

Immediately in the aftermath of the monsoon fury, there will be a flood of activity in the corridors of power. Reports will be prepared. Schemes will be drafted. And then some new issue will come up. Everything will be forgotten. The schemes will be forgotten. The reports will gather dust. Until the next drought. Or the next monsoon. Years will come and go. Governments will change. Thousands of crores of public money will be spent on vexatious exercises. But a crucial public need like effective water management will remain unaddressed.

Tamilnadu boasts of one of the oldest dams in the world – the Kalanai built by the Chola Emperor Karikala Chozhan in the 2nd Century AD. It bears testimony to the fact that effective water management had been thought of almost 1000 years ago. Sadly, when we talk about water management in the state, we still have to use a 1000-year-old example to make our point. The tanks and reservoirs that existed when the British left our shores may have been sufficient for the Tamilnadu of the 1940s. Since then the population has increased manifold. Cities have grown. Villages have become urbanised. Industries have increased.  And the need for water has grown astronomically.



It is time to wake up. A comprehensive plan for effective management of precious water resources has to be drawn up, involving experts. And this has to be implemented with no political interests coming in the way. Otherwise this sequence of alternating floods and drought will continue until slowly, but steadily this state will become uninhabitable



What we are doing to the environment is but a mirror reflection of what we are doing to ourselves and to one another
- Mahatma Gandhi



1 comment:

  1. Hi. Could you please share your number. I wish to speak to you you regrading a confidential matter. I am a Journalist based in New Delhi.

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