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Floods

Shades of blue: A symposium on emerging conflicts and challenges around water - Seminar magazine (October 2011)

Seminar magazine focuses on a pertinent topic each month. In October 2011, the issue titled 'Shades of blue' dealt with water conflicts and challenges in India.

The problem

(as posed by Sunjoy Joshi, Director and Distinguished Fellow, Observer Research Foundation, Delhi)

Here, the author explains that intense struggles over water are giving rise to conflicts at several levels, including individual, local, regional and international. These struggles over a resource exacerbate power struggles.

cover of the Seminar issueRead More



Floods in Orissa: No lessons learnt – An article in EPW

This article by Kishore C Samal in the Economic and Political Weekly (EPW) discusses how in the natural disater prone state of Orissa the authorities have not been able to draw up an effective disaster management plan and politicians continue to play politics with relief works. It argues that for dealing with these disasters and the relief and rehabilitation work that follows what is needed is the participation of the local community and functionaries of panchayati raj institutions, and coordination with national and international bodies.

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Floods in Orissa: No lessons learnt – An article by Kishore C Samal in EPW (2011)484.04 KB

Location

Balasore, OR, India
Latitude: 21.494167, Longitude: 86.931667

Comparative management performance of government and farmer managed irrigation systems in Kashmir

Kashmir was originally home to an elaborate network of farmer owned and managed canal based irrigation systems. Gradually, with the increase in planned development, several irrigation canals were taken under the control of the irrigation department. This paper compares the management of irrigation systems by farmers and government. 

Image of community desilting a canal

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Comparative management performance of government and farmer managed irrigation systems in Kashmir712.05 KB

Location

baramulla, JK, India
Latitude: 34.211475, Longitude: 74.343896

Assam’s strategy and action plan on climate change - Recommendations - First draft - ASTEC (2011)

This report by the Assam Science Technology & Environment Council (ASTEC) contains the compiled recommendation of three consultative workshops organized in Assam University, Gauhati University and Tezpur University by Climate Cell of Environment Division of Assam, Science Technology and Environment Council in collaboration with Department of Ecology and Environment Science, Assam University, Silchar, Department of Geography, Gauhati University, Guwahati and Department of Environmental Science, Tezpur University. Read More

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Assam’s strategy and action plan on climate change - Recommendations - First draft - Assam Science Technology & Environment Council (2011)3.08 MB

Climate change impact assessment of water resources of India - A paper from Current Science

Climate change impact on water resourcesThis paper published in the journal Current Science presents the findings of a study has been taken up to quantify the possible impacts of the climate change on the water resources of Indian river systems within the constraints of the uncertainty of climate change predictions. The study uses the PRECIS daily weather data to determine the spatio-temporal water availability in the river systems.

A distributed hydrological model, namely SWAT has been used to simulate all the river basins of the country. The analysis has been performed to evaluate the severity of droughts and floods and thus identify the vulnerable hotspots that may require attention in view of the climate change in various parts of the country

Impacts of climate change and climate variability on the water resources are likely to affect irrigated agriculture, installed power capacity, environmental flows in the dry season and higher flows during the wet season, thereby causing severe droughts and floods in urban and rural areas. Climate change impacts on water resources which are addressed and analysed in the present study include impacts on annual and inter-annual water availability as well as extreme events of droughts and floods. Read More

Piloting Knowledge Swaraj - A hand book on Indian science and technology - KICS

This hand book on Indian science and technology was produced at the end of a project entitled “Science, Ethics and Technological Responsibility in Developing and Emerging Countries” (SET DEV) by Knowledge in Civil Society (KICS). The project aimed at:

  • Activating processes of building institutional capacities and skills on science,ethics and STR socialization
  • Defining and understanding perspectives of socialization of science and technology that take into consideration local needs in a multilateral dialogue.

collage of images from the case studies

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Piloting Knowledge Swaraj - A hand book on Indian science and technology - KICS (2011)2.75 MB

Location

, AP, India
Latitude: 0.000000, Longitude: 0.000000

Disaster management in India – A report by Ministry of Home Affairs

This report by the Ministry of Home Affairs on disaster management in India is the outcome of an in-house compilation and analysis of information relating to disasters and their management.

The perception about disaster and its management has undergone a change followingFlood the enactment of the Disaster Management Act, 2005. The definition of disaster is now all encompassing, which includes not only the events emanating from natural and man-made causes, but even those events which are caused by accident or negligence.

There was a long felt need to capture information about all such events occurring across the sectors and efforts made to mitigate them in the country and to collate them at one place in a global perspective. This report has been an effort towards realising this thought.Read More

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Disaster management in India – A report by Ministry of Home Affairs (2011)76.68 MB

Location

Latur, MM, India
Latitude: 18.397680, Longitude: 76.580971

Flood hazard zonation of Assam – An atlas by National Remote Sensing Centre

This flood hazard atlas for the State of Assam prepared by the National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC) is based on an analysis of ten years of multi-temporal satellite datasets acquired during the flood seasons of 1998-2007.

Assam represents a highly flood-prone region characterized by severe hazards of floods. Although occurrence of flood has been an age-old phenomenon in the riverine areas of this region, the extent of damage caused by floods has increased significantly in recent years.

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Flood hazard zonation for Barpeta district of Assam (2011)5.17 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Baska district of Assam (2011)1.8 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Bongaigaon district of Assam (2011)2.29 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Cachar district of Assam (2011)4.47 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Chirang district of Assam (2011)1.32 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Darang district of Assam (2011)3.57 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Dhemaji district of Assam (2011)3.74 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Dhubri district of Assam (2011)4.04 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Dibrugarh district of Assam (2011)6.08 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Goalpara district of Assam (2011)3.58 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Golaghat district of Assam (2011)4.64 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Hailakhand district of Assam (2011)1.98 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Jorhat district of Assam (2011)5.98 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Kamrup Rural district of Assam (2011)2.04 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Kamrup Urban district of Assam (2011)1.43 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Karbi Anglong district of Assam (2011)1.4 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Karimganj district of Assam (2011)2.25 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Kokrajhar district of Assam (2011)2.31 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Lakhimpur district of Assam (2011)6.53 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Marigaon district of Assam (2011)2.03 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Nagaon district of Assam (2011)2.47 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Nalbari district of Assam (2011)3.68 MB
Flood hazard zonation for North Cachar district of Assam (2011)659.6 KB
Flood hazard zonation for Sibsagar district of Assam (2011)5.72 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Sonitpur district of Assam (2011)2.58 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Tinsukia district of Assam (2011)2.12 MB
Flood hazard zonation for Udalgiri district of Assam (2011)1.66 MB

Location

Goalpara, AS, India
Latitude: 26.177349, Longitude: 90.624687

Decentralized wastewater management – An overview of a community initiatives in New Delhi - Vigyan Vijay Foundation

This paper by Ajit Seshadri, Vigyan Vijay Foundation highlights the poor sanitation situation in India and argues that centralized approaches to wastewater treatment have had limited success and there is a need to make wastwater treatment people centric and effective through the use of decentralized systems such as DEWATS (Decentralized Wastewater Treatment Systems). DEWATS are locally organized and people driven systems that typically comprise a settler, anaerobic baffled tanks, filter beds of gravel and sand, and an open pond. The open pond or the polishing tank recreates a living environment for the wastewater to clean itself, naturally.Read More

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Decentralized wastewater management - An overview of a community initiative in New Delhi (India) - Vigyan Vijay Foundation (2009)375.33 KB
Recycled water applying natural treatment for horticulture from wastewater - Vigyan Vijay Foundation (2009)38.97 KB
Case studies of DEWATs at six sites - Vigyan Vijay Foundation (2009)878.24 KB
World water week - Abstract volume - Stockholm (2009)2.09 MB

Paleochannel and paleohydrology of Middle Siwalik (Pliocene) fluvial system in Northern India – A paper in Journal of Earth System Science

This paper in Journal of Earth System Science deals with paleochannel and paleohydrology of the Middle Siwalik (Pliocene) fluvial system in Northern India. In recent years, fluvial sedimentologists have carried out numerous studies to estimate quantitative hydrodynamics of ancient fluvial systems, particularly, their morphology and hydrology. The methods for reconstructing the morphology and hydrology employ either several groups of empirical relationships derived from modern fluvial environments or dynamic models of fluvial flow and sediment transports in alluvial reaches.

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Paleochannel and paleohydrology of Middle Siwalik (Pliocene) fluvial system in Northern India – A paper in Journal of Earth System Science (2011)589.01 KB
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Arghyam

6.22-2011.07.01-06