A building in Uttarakhand collapses due flash floods in 2012.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons / European Commission DG ECHO
A building in Uttarakhand collapses due flash floods in 2012. Photo: Wikimedia Commons / European Commission DG ECHO

A Himalayan warning

The government has not heeded the lessons from the 2013 Uttarakhand floods.

(This article is a part of the web-exclusive series from our latest issue 'Disaster Politics'. More from the print quarterly here.)

Even after two years, memories and scenes of the Uttarakhand floods of June 2013 – possibly the worst floods in the Himalayan region – are still terrifying. It is not just the number of deaths or the intensity of the raging river that generates this feeling. It is the possibility of such disasters occurring again that creates both fear and an urgency to learn lessons. Yet, the right lessons haven't been leant, especially in official circles within Uttarakhand, other Himalayan states in India and the neighbouring countries with Himalayan terrain. Indeed, the Nepal earthquakes of April-May 2015 should be a reminder. In the quake affected areas, a number of hydropower projects were damaged, exposing their vulnerability to natural disasters. Yet, we still do not want to read these signs.

Humans and their follies
There is little doubt that human activity exacerbated the Uttarakhand disaster in multiple ways. While unseasonal rainfall of high intensity was the immediate cause of the flood, such rainfall is itself linked to human-induced climate change. The Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, in its annual extreme-weather report of September 2014, listed 16 extreme weather events of 2013 where the role of climate change was undeniable. The list includes the Uttarakhand disaster. Even some of India's bureaucrats, such as the secretary to the Ministry of Earth Sciences, agreed that there was undeniable climate-change footprint in this event.

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Himal Southasian
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