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Study reveals how partial flood defences in Surat shifted risk toward vulnerable communities
Study reveals how partial flood defences in Surat shifted risk toward vulnerable communities

Indian Express

time2 days ago

  • Science
  • Indian Express

Study reveals how partial flood defences in Surat shifted risk toward vulnerable communities

Do partial flood defences actually protect cities, or do they simply redistribute the hazard? With this question in focus, a recent study by the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar (IITGN) and University of Burdwan, West Bengal, has revealed how partial flood defences shift risk toward vulnerable communities, raising critical questions about urban planning and equity. The findings of the research, published in the journal Nature Cities, offer a blueprint for cities to rethink flood adaptation strategies and build a more just, resilient, and climate-ready infrastructure. 'Most flood adaptation strategies are judged by whether they reduce total damage. By that measure, Surat's partial embankment system, which was built after the catastrophic 2006 floods, was successful in protecting its dense city centre,' explained Dr Udit Bhatia, Associate Professor at IITGN's Department of Civil Engineering and the principal investigator of the study. To understand these flood adaptation strategies further, Dr Bhatia and his co-authors used advanced hydrodynamic simulations, socio-economic data, and demographic-focused analysis to model a 100-year flood event in Surat. Employing simulations to create partial embankment systems or levees systems that counter the hypothetical catastrophic event, they assessed the impact of partial embankments as a primary systemic response to flooding, and analysed how human life, infrastructure, and the economy are affected. The team noted that levees reduced flood damage in core wards of Surat by Rs 31.24 billion (US$380 million) and in suburban areas by Rs 10.34 billion (US$125 million). But those numbers did not provide the whole story. 'By simulating floods under both 'no levee' and 'partial levee' conditions using a fully coupled 1D – 2D hydrodynamic model, we observed a sharp redistribution of risk,' stated Ashish S Kumar, the lead author of the study and a Ph D scholar in IITGN's Department of Civil Engineering. When the team analysed flood impacts across Surat's 284 neighbourhoods, they found that 134 areas experienced reduced flooding, while 119 saw deeper water. The maximum flood depth reduction reached an impressive 10.13 meters in protected areas, but some unprotected neighbourhoods faced increases of up to 2.38 meters. 'While core areas remained dry longer, downstream and peripheral wards, which are often less affluent and less protected, flooded earlier and more severely,' added Kumar, who is also the recipient of the central government's prestigious Prime Minister Research Fellowship. 'We observed that flooding was delayed by up to 12 hours in protected wards near the river, a valuable lead time for evacuation or emergency response,' said Dr Bhatia in a statement issued by IITGN. In contrast, the team noted that in some downstream regions, the onset of flooding happened up to seven hours earlier than in the baseline scenario. 'This temporal resolution in flood modelling is vital for preparedness planning. Delaying a flood by even a few hours can make the difference between controlled evacuation and disaster,' he added. To better understand the social impact, the IITGN team collaborated with Prof Rajarshi Majumder, a development economist from the University of Burdwan, and Prof Vivek Kapadia, a water policy expert who served as Secretary to the Government of Gujarat and Director of the Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Limited between 2020 and 2023. Relying on Prof Majumdar's economics expertise, the researchers analysed how flood damage and exposure were distributed across neighbourhoods. They used the Gini index, a standard measure of inequality, where 0 means perfect equality and 1 indicates extreme disparity. The results were striking. The Gini index for flood damage rose from 0.55 to 0.66, and for population exposure, it rose from 0.31 to 0.39. More starkly, 91% of post-levee flood damage was concentrated in just 50% of the city's neighbourhoods, many of them poorer, with a higher proportion of marginal workers, a proxy for economic vulnerability. 'The data suggest that the residual flood risk disproportionately shifted toward communities that were already disadvantaged,' observed co-author Majumder. In Surat, as in many cities of the Global South, peripheral areas house informal settlements, agricultural workers, and artisanal communities with limited access to infrastructure or disaster support. 'It is not that levees should not be built,' noted Dr Bhatia. 'But policymakers need better tools to understand the knock-on effects, especially in cities where development is uneven and capacity is constrained.' While Surat's levees reduced overall flood losses, a common justification for such investments, the study underscored that cost-benefit analysis alone is insufficient. 'If a flood plan protects downtown but worsens conditions for outlying villages, it transcends from being just a technical issue to becoming a moral one,' said Dr Bhatia. Towards this, the study offers a much-needed model for integrated flood planning that balances structural engineering with social equity. Shedding light on the holistic approaches to urban flood adaptation that cities could undertake, Kapadia, a co-author of the study and a Professor of Practice at IITGN, suggested the deployment of multi-scalar governance, where benefits in protected zones are not assumed to justify harm in others. 'We propose redirecting tax revenue from safer zones to fund adaptation in high-risk peripheries and investing in nature-based infrastructure like wetlands or buffer zones that distribute water pressure more evenly,' Kapadia said. In the face of rising floodwaters and increasingly erratic weather, cities worldwide have turned to a seemingly straightforward solution: Build a wall. From Spain to Surat, partial embankment systems or levees have become the go-to defence against riverine and coastal flooding. The team of researchers said that often built along rivers and low-lying urban corridors, these structures are designed to hold back water during high discharge events, shielding the most economically important urban cores. But, historically, it has been observed that this protection is uneven and temporary. Floodwaters rerouted by these barriers found new paths, it was found. In safeguarding these high-value zones, flood defences often push rising waters to the edges of the city, into informal, less developed settlements that are ill-equipped to absorb the blow, the study noted. With climate change making extreme weather events more common, cities must move beyond patchwork defences, according to the study. Protecting one side of a river while flooding the other may save a few billion rupees today, but it risks compounding inequality and social unrest tomorrow, the study noted, positioning itself as a potential toolkit for city planners, policy makers, and governments.

Partial flood defence shifts risks toward vulnerable people in cities: IIT study
Partial flood defence shifts risks toward vulnerable people in cities: IIT study

Hindustan Times

time2 days ago

  • Science
  • Hindustan Times

Partial flood defence shifts risks toward vulnerable people in cities: IIT study

Ahmedabad: The researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Gandhinagar have found that flood protection measures create inequality by protecting some neighborhoods while leaving others with worse flooding. The team developed tools to assess how protective infrastructure redistributes flood damage and deepens inequality in cities. Flooding is among the most devastating of natural hazards, causing around US$41.1 billion in annual economic losses and affecting 74.6 million people worldwide between 2003 and 2022. (AP Tolang) The study titled 'Partial flood defenses shift risks and amplify inequality in a core–periphery city' and published in leading journal Nature Cities on August 15, examines how levees and embankments affect flood risk across city parts. Flooding is among the most devastating of natural hazards, causing around US$41.1 billion in annual economic losses and affecting 74.6 million people worldwide between 2003 and 2022. These impacts are expected to increase further as populations expand into floodplains, economic activities intensify and climate change drives more extreme flood events, as per the study. Using Surat as a case-study, the researchers showed how partial flood defences shift risk toward vulnerable communities, raising questions about urban planning and equity. 'Adaptation must consider who is protected and who remains exposed, not just total risk reduction. Flood resilience is about ethics, not just about engineering. If our solutions protect some but leave others worse off, we haven't solved the problem; we've just reshaped it. This study shows that we can do better, and now we know how,' said Udit Bhatia, Associate Professor at IITGN's Department of Civil Engineering and the principal investigator of the study. Cities worldwide use partial embankment systems and levees against flooding, from Spain to India, the study stated while noting that these structures hold back water and shield urban cores but redirect waters to city edges and informal settlements. 'In many cities of the Global South, peripheral areas house informal settlements, agricultural workers, and artisanal communities with limited access to infrastructure or disaster support,' said Bhatia. The study uses Surat as a case study to generate what-if scenarios, a city on Gujarat's Tapi River that has suffered repeated floods, including a major one in 2006. The researchers used a hydrodynamic model built with river records, city data, and 49 years of Ukai Reservoir discharges to simulate a 100-year flood with and without partial levees. They combined this with land-use damage estimates updated to 2022 replacement costs and ward-level demographic data to assess how losses change. The results showed that partial levees reduced damages by ₹31.24 billion (US$380 million) in the city's urban wards and ₹10.34 billion (US$125 million) in surrounding villages. At the same time, damages became more uneven. The researchers measured this using the Gini index, which ranges from 0 (losses evenly spread) to 1 (losses concentrated in one place). In Surat, the Gini for flood damages increased from 0.55 to 0.66 after levees, and the Gini for population exposure rose from 0.31 to 0.39, meaning fewer neighborhoods bore a greater share of the impact. Ashish S. Kumar, the lead author and a PhD scholar in IITGN's Department of Civil Engineering, said their approach looked beyond standard flood maps. 'City planners need to know where water goes, how fast it arrives, how long it stays, and which communities are hit hardest,' he explained. The analysis showed that neighborhoods close to the river gained up to 12 extra hours before flooding, while some downstream areas flooded up to seven hours earlier. Of Surat's 284 neighborhoods, 119 experienced deeper floods and 134 saw less. In exposed areas, floodwaters rose by up to 2.38 meters, while protected areas saw water levels drop by as much as 10.13 meters. 'While core areas remained dry longer, downstream and peripheral wards, which are often less affluent and less protected, flooded earlier and more severely,' said Kumar, who is also the recipient of the Prime Minister Research Fellowship. Flood volumes declined overall, with reductions of 28.51 million cubic meters in the city and 37.42 million in the suburbs. Expected annual savings were estimated at ₹2.02 billion in the core city and ₹1.44 billion in suburbs. But some downstream neighborhoods could still face additional damages of up to ₹600 million (US$7.3 million) over the next 50 years. These impacts fell most heavily on wards with larger shares of marginal workers, showing that economic vulnerability and residual flood risk overlap. The authors describe this as a core–periphery dynamic, where central, economically important wards are protected while peripheral or rural zones remain exposed. They point out that similar patterns are seen elsewhere, such as in Valencia in 2024 when suburban areas were flooded while the city centre was shielded, and in cities like Chennai and Kinshasa where partial defences protect urban cores at the expense of the edges. Co-author Rajarshi Majumder of the University of Burdwan noted that the worst-hit neighborhoods in Surat also had more precarious workers. Vivek Kapadia, who has worked on Gujarat's water projects, said that choosing which areas to protect is as important as the engineering of the levees themselves. The researchers conclude that levees remain necessary but should be combined with early warning systems, wetland and mangrove restoration, flood zoning, bypass channels, and reinvestment of tax revenues from protected zones into unprotected ones. 'Cities in India face tough choices with limited budgets,' Bhatia said. 'But with the right tools, data, and intent, decisions can be better balanced.'

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