DiscoverThe Wire TalksFlooding Will Continue in Immediate and Maybe Long-Term Future, But I'm Still Hopeful | Mihir Bhatt
Flooding Will Continue in Immediate and Maybe Long-Term Future, But I'm Still Hopeful | Mihir Bhatt

Flooding Will Continue in Immediate and Maybe Long-Term Future, But I'm Still Hopeful | Mihir Bhatt

Update: 2025-09-12
Share

Description

What is the cause of the severe flooding seen in northern states and cities? 


 


“Climate change and its impact is intensifying rainfall pattern. The bigger failure is how our cities are designed, planned and managed and continue to grow,” says Mihir Bhatt, Ahmedabad based architect and urban planner. Bhatt is the director of the All India Disaster Management Institute, which works on initiatives in risk reduction and climate resilience.


 


He said there was a “design mismatch.” “Our stormwater systems and drainage networks are built for rainfall pattern for the past, not for the present, even less for the future,” he said to Sidharth Bhatia in a podcast conversation.


 


He also gave the example of Gurugram, where “rapid urbanisation filled in natural catchments that once absorbed excess water from the neighbouring area.”


Flooding would be seen in rural and urban areas for the near and perhaps long term future, but many solutions are there. He gave the example of Nagaland, where 39 local government bodies came together to work with the state government on disaster mitigation. “I am not a pessimist” he said. “Indians can build something if we let them.”

Comments 
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Flooding Will Continue in Immediate and Maybe Long-Term Future, But I'm Still Hopeful | Mihir Bhatt

Flooding Will Continue in Immediate and Maybe Long-Term Future, But I'm Still Hopeful | Mihir Bhatt

The Wire