Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Kerala accuses TN of aggravatin­g flood fury

BLAME Says sudden release of dam water by neighbouri­ng state was a reason for the deluge

- HT Correspond­ent

NEW DELHI: Tamil Nadu’s failure to control release of water from the Mullaperiy­ar dam till the reservoir reached its full capacity is one of the reasons for the flash floods in Kerala that killed over 230 people and damaged property worth thousands of crores, the Kerala government said in the Supreme Court on Thursday.

In its affidavit, Kerala blamed the sudden release of water from the dam for the unpreceden­ted floods. “The sudden releases from the Mullaperiy­ar Dam, 3rd largest reservoir in the Periyar Basin, forced us (Kerala) to release more water from the Idukki reservoir, downstream of Mullaperiy­ar, which is one of the causes of this deluge,” read the affidavit, filed by the chief secretary of the state, Tom Jose.

Located in the upper reaches of the Western Ghats above the Idukki reservoir, Mullaperiy­ar dam is being operated by the Tamil Nadu government even though it is wholly situated in Kerala. The catchment area of the Idukki reservoir is 650 sq km and the Mullaperiy­ar reservoir has a catchment area of 624 sq km.

The state, the affidavit stated, was managing the spate of water by controllin­g spill and letting a major portion of the flood waters escape to the sea by “implementp­ositive ing a strict operationa­l control over the spill of the two largest reservoir systems of Idukki and Idamalayar in synchroniz­ation with eight small other reservoir systems in the Periyar basin.”

Kerala’s affidavit comes in response to a direction by the top court on August 17. The order came on a petition filed by residents of Kerala to maintain structural safety of the dam, which as per an earlier SC judgement is being overlooked by the three-member supervisor­y committee that was constitute­d on the directions of the top court in 2014

On August 17, the Centre informed the top court that the National Crisis Management Committee (NCMC) dealing with devastatin­g floods in Kerala has decided to reduce water level in Mullaperiy­ar dam to check additional inflow to avert further disaster.

According to Kerala, the secretary, water resources, Government of Kerala, had addressed a letter to her counterpar­t in Tamil Nadu as well as the chairman of the supervisor­y committee on the Mullaperiy­ar dam urging the commenceme­nt of controlled releases of water. The request was made to get sufficient time to evacuate people so that they would not be hit by flash floods in their sleep. But no assurance was received from Tamil Nadu even after repeated requests.

The Mullaperiy­ar reservoir water was suddenly discharged by opening all thirteen shutters to Idukki downstream at midnight on August 15. Discharge continued and around 9,000 cusecs of water was let out between 8 am and 1 pm and 21,450 cusecs at 2pm. The district administra­tion was at that time franticall­y evacuating people from the downstream of Idukki dam.

With a view to avoid such disasters in future, Kerala has urged the top court to form a management committee that would directly report to the supervisor­y committee , appointed at the behest of the Supreme Court, to manage dayto-day operations of Mullaperiy­ar dam.

The deluge faced by Kerala was unpreceden­ted in its recent history and it has already surpassed the devastatio­n caused by the 1924 floods, the affidavit said. “It was now considered the most intense flood to have hit Kerala in the last 100 years as 13 of the 14 districts were affected and 774 of the total 1564 villages were inundated. Of its population of 3.48 crore, more than 54 lakh people i.e. one-sixth of the state’s total population was directly affected by the deluge,” read the affidavit filed by the Kerala government.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A man standing in floodwater shares tea with another man sitting in a canoe in Kerala’s Alappuzha district.
BLOOMBERG A man standing in floodwater shares tea with another man sitting in a canoe in Kerala’s Alappuzha district.
 ?? REUTERS ?? Volunteers clean a house that was damaged in the flood on the outskirts of Kochi in Kerala.
REUTERS Volunteers clean a house that was damaged in the flood on the outskirts of Kochi in Kerala.

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