San Francisco Chronicle

Massive storm nothing new for financial capital

- By Nirmala George Nirmala George is an Associated Press writer.

NEW DELHI — Two massive, rain-soaked cities on opposite sides of the world are struggling with swirling, brackish waters that have brought death and devastatio­n. For Houston, it’s unpreceden­ted. For Mumbai, it’s painfully common.

For India’s financial capital and other South Asian cities and farmlands, floods are regular, cataclysmi­c occurrence­s made worse by breakneck urban developmen­t and population booms that will only become more challengin­g as climate change increases disaster risk.

In the past two months, more than 1,000 people have been killed in flooding events across India, southern Nepal and northern Bangladesh. Some 40 million more have seen their homes, businesses or crops destroyed.

Mumbai was especially hard hit, with water swamping offices, schools and roads and about 60 people killed — 33 alone in Thursday’s collapse of a 117year-old apartment building whose foundation had been weakened by the flooding. Thousands of buildings in Mumbai are more than a century old, their foundation­s weakened by years of heavy rains during the June-September monsoon season.

“The city was brought to its knees,” said Darryl D’Monte, a Mumbai-based environmen­talist.

Such tragedies happen almost every year in South Asia. The amount of rain Hurricane Harvey dumped on Houston over the past week was unpreceden­ted not only for the city but also for the continenta­l U.S. Mumbai, however, experience­d similar flooding just 12 years ago, and several major Indian cities have been inundated since then, including Kolkata in 2007, Hyderabad in 2008, Srinagar in 2014 and Chennai in 2015.

The death toll is often high, as it is this monsoon season, because of factors that include inadequate housing. In Mumbai alone, some 3 million people are crammed into low-lying slums and have few places to flee to when floods hit.

Experts say Indian officials are doing little to reduce the risks. Instead, they allow new constructi­on, paving over floodplain­s, denuding forests and testing river banks.

Mumbai authoritie­s have ignored plans to upgrade the city’s British-era drainage system, clear drains of plastic debris and install pumping stations and flood gates to get any floodwater­s out, D’Monte said.

“In most cities, lakes, ponds and even wide-open spaces acted as sponges to absorb excess rainfall. These have all disappeare­d from our cities and towns as water bodies are filled up and buildings come up in their place,” said Chandra Bhushan of the Center for Science and Environmen­t, an environmen­t think tank in New Delhi.

“We are becoming very good at weather forecastin­g. But we are very poor in putting that forecast informatio­n into decisions and actions,” he said.

 ?? Punit Paranjpe / AFP / Getty Images ?? Residents wade through a flooded street during rains in Mumbai. Storms brought the city to a virtual standstill, causing transporta­tion chaos and prompting warnings to stay indoors.
Punit Paranjpe / AFP / Getty Images Residents wade through a flooded street during rains in Mumbai. Storms brought the city to a virtual standstill, causing transporta­tion chaos and prompting warnings to stay indoors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States