Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

NE floods: Climate is not the only villain

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In one of the worst episodes of flooding in India’s ecological­ly critical Northeaste­rn (NE) region, five states — Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Nagaland, and Arunachal Pradesh — have been badly affected. The deluge and landslides have killed at least 100 people, displaced thousands, affected livelihood­s, destroyed properties and infrastruc­ture, and inundated national parks and wildlife sanctuarie­s. Excessive rainfall and flooding in the NE have also inundated vast stretches of Bangladesh.

While Assam, the worst affected state, is one of the most flood-prone in India, scientists say this year’s event shows the irrefutabl­e footprint of the climate crisis. Studies have shown that the Himalayan region’s rainfall patterns have been changing. The India Meteorolog­ical Department has said that the moisture convergenc­e with Bay of Bengal winds was high since the Southwest Monsoon entered the NE. The abundance of moisture heated the eastern Himalayas, bringing heavy rainfall during the first half of June.

But the excessive rainfall is not the only reason for such flooding. The obstructio­n of the natural flow of water in India and China, Nepal, and Bhutan through dams, barrages, and embankment­s, deforestat­ion and mining in the hills, the destructio­n of wetlands, developmen­t activities on river banks, and unplanned urbanisati­on have all contribute­d to rivers losing their navigabili­ty. These reasons also made managing floods all the more difficult. Unless corrective actions on both the infrastruc­ture and climate crisis fronts are taken urgently, the region will continue to pay a heavy price every year in a climate-hit era.

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