The current Edition of Down To Earth contains three Articles on Floods and 
Kosi. The links below may not open if you do not subscribe to Down To Earth. 
Any way Read this on in the text form. Dr.V.N.Sharma 
=============================Editorial: Ignorance and arrogance make for good 
floods(By Sunita Narain)=============================This year, for once, the 
devastating floods of Bihar seem to have touched us. Last year, when the same 
region was reeling under what was said to be the worst floods in living 
history, we simply did not know. Media had flashed a few images, but it was 
more of the same: rivers flood this region every year, so what’s new? What’s 
there to say?This year there are some differences: first, the breach in the 
Kosi’s protection system of embankments and barrages took place in Nepal, not 
in India. As maintenance of the embankments was our responsibility, we could 
not blame Nepal for the floods. We had to look within.Second, the area, drowned 
under the flood, was massive and millions were marooned in remote villages. 
This was partly because this time the river breached upstream of the Kosi 
barrage and spilled over the land, forgetting that it even had a course to run 
before it flowed into the Ganga. Remember, this is a river, which has changed 
its course by 120 km in the past 250 years—satellite images show 12 distinct 
channels of how the river has moved.Third, and most important, the flood 
captured our attention, because of the scale of the human tragedy. It was made 
clear that in spite of all our big talk and even bigger institutions for 
disaster management, we remain unprepared, under-staffed and unequipped for a 
crisis, when it hits. Even as people waited to be rescued we had few boats to 
bring them to safe places; we had little food, water and shelter to provide for 
them in the relief camps; and worse, we had no authority to ensure that empty 
homes would not be ransacked. As a result, people refused to leave. They 
preferred the swirling water to relief camps. What an indictment of our 
efforts.Now the waters are finally receding and before our attention also moves 
on, let us learn, for once, the hard message of the Kosi floods of 2008. Let us 
learn because this disaster may not be the first or the last but it tells us of 
a situation getting out of control. It tells us that we have done so much wrong 
in the way we have managed our environment. It tells us that we know so little 
about how climate change and its manifestation of changing intensities of 
rainfall will exacerbate floods in the future. It also tells that we cannot 
‘adapt’ to these changes, unless we do things differently.Let’s unpack this 
lesson. For long, we have believed that we can ‘conquer’ nature, control the 
flood and emasculate our rivers. In Kosi and its tributaries, we worked this 
engineering to perfection, by building barrages to hold the river, accompanied 
with miles of embankments to tie the river down.It was as far back as 1991, 
that environmentalist Anil Agarwal published the book, Floods, flood plains and 
environmental myths. He explained how the engineering solution was in fact 
increasing both the incidence and intensity of floods. The reason was simple. 
The rivers brought down huge quantities of silt each year. The Kosi, in 
particular, was known to bring coarse sediments, which would add to the rate of 
siltation. Wherever embankments were built, silt got deposited in the river. We 
forgot that the extraordinary fertility of this region was because of this same 
alluvial silt, which was spread over the land by the inundating waters. With 
silt in its bed, the flow was reduced and floods increased. When the 
embankments broke or breached, flood duration increased because the water could 
not drain away. Worse, the engineering walls led people to believe that they 
were protected from floods. As a result, low lying areas got populated. Then 
when the wall broke, the flood hit hard.In doing all this, explained Anil 
Agarwal, we messed up the drainage system of the region. We merrily filled up 
the water bodies, which were the sponges for its floodwater and forgot the 
‘dead’ channels of the river, through which the water gushed away. We believed 
these were unnecessary. We forgot how the wetlands provided food in the flood 
season—from fish to plant biodiversity. We forgot because first, we were hungry 
for land. Then, we were greedy for the money we would make from these 
engineering marvels, which were repaired on paper and half built, for full 
money. Corruption became the way of life. In all this, we forgot that we had 
once learnt to ‘live’ with floods.But when he wrote this, Anil Agarwal was 
pilloried and mocked; the environmental lobby even accused him of playing into 
the timber contractor’s hand. All because he said that we should stop blaming 
the mountains for the floods in the plains. It was time we understood that the 
forests of the Himalayas were needed for the people who lived there. But the 
forests in this fragile and extremely young and erosion-prone region would not 
stop the floods in the plains. To ‘stop’ the floods, we had to re-learn the 
science and art of water management. The water engineers rubbished this saying 
they knew better. They had the answers. All I can say, we wish they were 
right.We have to now understand that we are faced with a double whammy—floods 
will increase also because the pattern of rainfall is going on a twist. Climate 
change is making rain more unseasonal, erratic and intense in many parts of the 
country. ‘Coping’ with floods will become even more difficult now.So what we 
can do without is the deadly combination of arrogance and ignorance. Instead, 
we can do with some learning. And a lot of doing.Read this editorial online 
>>http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=1To comment, write to >> 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] story: Let there be floodsBihar floods expose India’s 
unpreparedness to tackle disasters and the folly of trying to confine the Kosi 
within a jacket of embankments More 
>>http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=2------------------------------Photo
 essay: Kosi after the breach 
>>http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=3Dr.V.N.Sharmahttp://canvas.nowpos.com/vnsharma
 
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