logo
Why a few hours of rain still bring India's biggest cities to a standstill

Why a few hours of rain still bring India's biggest cities to a standstill

On Monday morning (May 26), commuters on Mumbai's much-hyped Aqua Line 3 metro were met not by the promise of smoother travel, but by ankle-deep floodwater. The newly inaugurated underground station at Worli was inundated after an intense burst of monsoon rain, water poured down its walls, flooded the platform, and leaked through the roof. The city's earliest monsoon arrival in 35 years had made its entrance, and left the latest civic showpiece in tatters.
Meanwhile, in Delhi, Saturday's record-breaking downpour turned the capital's roads into rivers. With 185.9 mm of rainfall this May, nearly nine times the usual, the city is witnessing its wettest May ever. Flights were delayed, traffic choked, and low-lying areas submerged as thunderclouds ripped across the skyline.
Down south, Bengaluru, last week, was battered by a 12-hour rain marathon that flooded 500 homes, killed at least three people, and filled over 20 lakes to capacity. The city, perched on a plateau with no natural river drainage, turned into a bowl of chaos, yet again.
From north to south, the script is the same: a few hours of rain and entire cities collapse. Why do Indian cities flood so easily? Why haven't years of warnings, policies, and crores in spending fixed this? And more importantly, who is really accountable? People are left stuck, governments rush to react, and the damage runs deeper than just flooded roads—it hits lives, livelihoods, and the economy.
Why are cities like Bengaluru, Delhi and Mumbai so flood-prone?
Much of urban India relies on colonial-era drainage systems designed over a century ago. Take Mumbai: the city's stormwater network, laid out by the British in the 1860s, was engineered to carry 25 mm of rain per hour during low tide. That might have sufficed for a coastal town of 2 million people—not for a mega-metropolis of over 20 million that now routinely sees rainfall exceeding 100 mm/hour.
In Delhi, the drainage network was built for just 50 mm of daily rain, based on standards from 1976. The capital, however, now regularly receives four times that amount in a single day. Bengaluru's stormwater drains are equally archaic and poorly maintained, clogged with silt, debris and sometimes even furniture.
The result then is that rainwater that should drain away instead turns city streets into cesspools.
How poor planning and lost wetlands made urban flooding worse
Rapid and unplanned urbanisation has only made things worse, argue infra experts. Across cities, construction has bulldozed through natural buffers like lakes, wetlands and drainage valleys.
Mumbai has lost nearly 80 per cent of its natural water bodies over the last four decades. So has Bengaluru, where once-interconnected lakes like Bellandur and Varthur are now flanked by tech parks and apartment blocks. In Delhi-NCR, high-rise colonies and malls stand where floodplains once soaked up excess rainwater.
These wetlands acted like sponges. With them gone, there is nowhere for the water to go, except up into homes and down into basements.
Even where drains exist, they often serve as dumping grounds rather than water channels. Solid waste, silt and construction debris routinely clog drainage lines, reducing their capacity by as much as 40–60 per cent.
Mumbai, for instance, produces over 9,000 tonnes of garbage every day. Much of it ends up in the city's waterways. In 2025, despite a ₹550 crore desilting budget, only 37 per cent of the silt in the Mithi River was removed before the rains began. Court delays were blamed. The consequences were predictable.
In Bengaluru, experts estimate that only 10 per cent of the city's stormwater drain capacity is functional. The rest is filled with solid waste, sewage or hardened silt.
Why flood-control budgets don't solve India's waterlogging problem
Infrastructure breakdowns are only part of the story. At the heart of the waterlogging crisis lies broken urban governance.
Drainage systems fall under a patchwork of agencies, municipal corporations, state departments and central bodies, each working in silos, often at cross-purposes. In Mumbai, the long-delayed BRIMSTOWAD project, launched in 1993 to modernise stormwater drains—its Phase II remains just 50 per cent complete, while Phase I is at 75 per cent completion. Disputes between the BMC and state authorities have stalled key pumping stations for years.
Delhi's new drainage master plan has been in the works since 2016 but remains unapproved. In its absence, the city continues to combine sewage and stormwater in the same pipes—a recipe for disaster when it floods.
How topography and encroachment magnify urban flood damage
Topography plays a cruel trick on Indian cities. Many of the worst-hit areas are built on reclaimed or low-lying land, where water naturally collects.
Mumbai's plush neighbourhoods like Worli and Nariman Point are built on reclaimed land. When it rains, water from higher parts of the city rushes down to these pockets, often blocked by construction or tidal backflow.
In Delhi, the Yamuna floodplains have been encroached upon by both formal and informal settlements. During intense rains, these areas are the first to drown, and the last to receive relief.
Is climate change accelerating urban flooding in Indian cities?
Climate change has turbocharged these vulnerabilities. Extreme rainfall events are now more frequent, intense and unpredictable.
Mumbai received 944 mm of rain in a single day in 2005, a record many dismissed as a freak event. But by 2024, such 'freak' events are becoming annual. Climate models predict a 30 per cent increase in extreme rainfall by 2030. Delhi saw over 200 mm of rainfall in 24 hours in 2024. Bengaluru, too, has faced cloudbursts that its outdated infrastructure simply cannot handle.
When heavy rains coincide with high tide or construction blockages, the system collapses, and the city drowns.
Who is responsible when floods claim lives and paralyse cities?
The toll is not just infrastructural, it's human. In 2024, Mumbai recorded at least seven deaths from open manholes and submerged drains. Delhi saw the death of nearly 20 people last year, mostly children and workers, to drowning or electrocution. In May 2025, Bengaluru saw three flood-related deaths, including a child and a 63-year-old man electrocuted while trying to drain his home.
The economic losses are equally staggering. Flood-related disruptions in Mumbai alone have cost the city thousands of crores over the years, with halted trains, shuttered offices and damaged infrastructure.
Meanwhile, authorities continue to offer reactive, band-aid solutions: temporary dewatering pumps, emergency desilting drives or new bylaws for rainwater harvesting. But without long-term, integrated planning, these remain cosmetic fixes.
Upgrading city-wide drainage systems requires multi-agency coordination, consistent funding and data-driven design based on updated rainfall and runoff patterns, none of which urban India currently has in place.
As the climate crisis intensifies, the water will only rise. The real question then becomes how long can Indian cities tread water before they sink under the weight of their own neglect?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Toll of India Himalayan flood likely to be at least 70
Toll of India Himalayan flood likely to be at least 70

New Indian Express

time8 hours ago

  • New Indian Express

Toll of India Himalayan flood likely to be at least 70

Indian officials say at least 68 people are unaccounted for a week after a deadly wall of icy water swept away a Himalayan town and buried it in mud. On top of four people reported to have been killed, it takes the likely overall toll of the August 5 disaster to more than 70 dead. Videos broadcast by survivors showed a terrifying surge of muddy water sweeping away multi-storey apartment blocks. Disaster officials said Tuesday that they were searching for corpses in the wreckage of the tourist town of Dharali in Uttarakhand state. Gambhir Singh Chauhan, from the National Disaster Response Force, said sniffer dogs had identified several sites indicating there was a body but when "when digging started, water came out from below". Chauhan said teams were also using ground penetrating radar in the grim search. More than 100 people were initially reported as missing. But with roads swept away and mobile phone communications damaged, it has taken rescuers days to cross-check the list. The local government now lists 68 people as missing, including 44 Indians and 22 Nepalis. Nine soldiers are on the list. Deadly floods and landslides are common during the monsoon season from June to September, but experts say climate change, coupled with poorly planned development, is increasing their frequency and severity.

Global warming alone is not behind Uttarkashi flash floods. Greed is
Global warming alone is not behind Uttarkashi flash floods. Greed is

Indian Express

time15 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Global warming alone is not behind Uttarkashi flash floods. Greed is

This year's monsoon has been particularly destructive in the lower Himalaya, causing devastating erosion and flash floods in many parts of Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh. As early as mid-May, heavy rain struck the mountains, several weeks before the anticipated arrival of the monsoon. Friends and neighbours in my hometown of Mussoorie blamed these unexpected storms on 'climate change', shaking their heads with fatalistic despair. Somehow, they seemed to forget that violent pre-monsoon thunderstorms have occurred in Mussoorie for generations. Without a doubt, rapidly rising temperatures on our planet and the increasing presence of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere pose an enormous risk to the future of life on Earth as we know it. However, automatically blaming erratic weather on climate change often distracts us from the real causes and consequences. Unfortunately, this repeated refrain has become an alternative to the old, weather-beaten phrase, 'acts of god,' which insurance companies always invoked as a disclaimer. Being neither a meteorologist nor a glaciologist, I can't offer a definitive explanation for the tragic events that struck the upper Bhagirathi Valley last week, when a flash flood wiped out parts of Dharali village near Harsil. Even as rescue efforts are still underway, it is clear that the loss of life and property has been horrific. What is also self-evident is that this kind of event has happened many times before and similar disasters will occur in the future. Living in the Himalaya we must understand that this is an extremely unstable region that is vulnerable to the powerful forces of hydrology, erosion and earthquakes. Deforestation and other man-made environmental problems only make things worse. In recent memory, we have seen the catastrophic flash floods of 2013, when Kedarnath and the Mandakini Valley were inundated by an unstoppable surge of water and debris caused by a glacial outburst that was triggered by excessive rain. Two years earlier, in 2011, the Assi Ganga Valley near Uttarkashi was scoured of life by a powerful flood that washed away a large hydropower project along with many labourers who were camped by the river. When these disasters occurred, I was reminded of the historic floods of 1970 and 1978, when minor tributaries of the Alakananda and Bhagirathi were blocked by landslides, forming temporary dams that finally burst and carried a huge volume of water and rubble downstream. Almost a century before that, in 1880, a major flash flood occurred near the site of this week's disaster. Frederick Wilson, a British timber baron who had a home in Harsil and clear-felled the deodar forests around Dharali, was reported to have been washed away and killed. However, as preparations for his memorial service were being made, he arrived in Mussoorie on foot, having miraculously survived. All of this is to say that the tragic consequences of a heavy monsoon in populated areas of the Himalaya is not something new or unexpected. What has changed is the indiscriminate, unplanned and often illegal construction of homes, guesthouses, ashrams, hotels, Maggi points and military camps that lie directly in the path of potential flash floods. The scarcity of buildable land in the mountains, where level ground is hard to find, drives people to take desperate risks. Margins of streams and rivers, often filled with debris from earlier floods, present a tempting option. Add to this political opportunism or bureaucratic complacency and the end result becomes inevitable. Much of the recent construction along the Char Dham Yatra route in Uttarakhand is in response to constantly increasing numbers of pilgrims visiting sacred sites near the sources of the Ganga. These were once remote shrines that devotees approached on foot, but they are now interconnected by ever-widening motor roads, not to mention helicopter services. Without some sort of control over the number of visitors that travel through these valleys, the magnitude of forthcoming disasters will only increase. The annual flood of religious tourism in Uttarakhand leads to the proliferation of hotels, dhabas and yoga retreats that cater to their needs. The majority of these structures are erected along riverbanks where water levels can suddenly rise, washing away everything in their wake. One doesn't have to travel to Uttarkashi or Dharali to observe this kind of dangerous, ill-advised construction. It is happening in the state capital of Dehradun, where streambeds and seasonal watercourses are now sites for residential colonies. In Mussoorie, where new construction had been halted for years by the Supreme Court of India, there is now a surreptitious building boom. Many new houses and homestays have been built on precarious foundations, often atop the rubble of earlier landslides. Of course, none of these disasters waiting to happen are the result of climate change. Nevertheless, when rain begins to fall and hillsides collapse, we tend to look for causes beyond our own careless greed and indifference. The true consequences of global warming will be far more profound and prolonged than the natural disasters we are seeing today. Shifting weather patterns and melting glaciers in the Himalaya are certainly part of the outcome. However, by always pointing a finger at climate change, we distance ourselves from the more immediate and avoidable factors that make these crises so horrendous and painfully familiar. Alter lives and writes in the Himalaya

Floodgates of Naini lake opened as water level crosses safe mark of 10 ft
Floodgates of Naini lake opened as water level crosses safe mark of 10 ft

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Time of India

Floodgates of Naini lake opened as water level crosses safe mark of 10 ft

Nainital: The floodgates of the Naini lake in the heart of Nainital town were opened by authorities on Monday morning after incessant rainfall in the past 24 hours caused the water level to cross the designated safety threshold of 10 ft above the zero mark located at Tallital. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The gauge level was recorded at 10 ft and 2 inches on Monday, exceeding the permissible limit. Ramesh Singh, the control room operator at the lake monitoring station, said a total of four inches of water was released twice – two inches in the morning and two inches at noon – to maintain the lake level. According to official records, since the British era, the standard water level for Naini lake was instructed to be maintained at 10 ft in the month of Aug every year, exceeding which would authorise the opening of the floodgates. Following the reading, irrigation and disaster management department officials initiated a controlled release by opening each gate by two inches twice to relieve pressure on the lake's structure and prevent downstream flooding. While the lake's maximum depth is 89 ft, a recent photograph from the lake monitoring station showed the water level crossing 85 ft, visibly exceeding the safe mark on the gauge scale installed near the observation shed. Residents living on the lakeside and low-lying regions have been advised to stay alert and follow real-time updates from local authorities. The supervisory control and data acquisition (Scada)-operated gates were opened only after informing the people living in low-lying areas. Officials confirmed that the situation is being closely monitored and further decisions regarding water discharge will be based on upcoming weather patterns. The region continues to brace for more rain, with the met department forecasting continued showers throughout the week.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store