1. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING , PUNE
CURRENT PRACTICES
„THE CASE OF MUMBAI‟
[NOSPLAN 2013-SAFE CITIES]
GROUP MEMBERS:
AISHWARYA BORATE
SEJAL MATHUR
AKSHAY PATIL
DEVASHREE RAGDE
AKSHAY OZA
JAY BAVISKAR
2. REASON FOR CHOOSING MUMBAI
AS TOPIC FOR CASE STUDY
Sr.
City
Country
Agglomeration (2003)
1
Tokyo
Japan
3,38,50,000
2
Mexico city
Mexico
2,20,50,000
3
New York
USA
2,18,50,000
4
Seoul
South Korea
2,18,50,000
5
Sao Paulo
Brazil
1,98,50,000
6
Mumbai
India
1,91,00,000
7
Delhi
India
1,85,50,000
8
Los Angeles
USA
1,76,50,000
9
Osaka
Japan
1,67,00,000
10
Jakarta
Indonesia
1,65,50,000
3.
4. MUMBAI FLOOD HISTORY
Max. recorded rainfall in Mumbai in a day
05/08/1976- 265 mm
10/09/1991- 475 mm
10/09/1930- 548 mm
05/07/1974- 575 mm
26/07/2005- 944 mm (In first 6 hrs.- 0830 to1430
hrs. Only 19.3 mm rainfall & in last 6 hrs. -0230 to
0830 hrs. only 59.2 mm rainfall)
5. CASUALTY AND DAMAGE : 26/07/2005 FLOODS
EXTENSIVE LOSS OF LIFE
445 people lost their lives in the flashfloods
DAMAGED BUILDINGS AND VEHICLES
Residential establishments - partly damaged:50,000
Residential establishments - fully damaged: 2,000
Commercial establishments: 40,000
Vehicles: 30,000
MEDICAL CARE AND HOSPITALS
437 Primary Health Centers, rural hospitals ,and
residential premises for health personnel were damaged
by flooding
EDUCATION AND SCHOOLS
More than 20,000 classrooms damaged and97 school
buildings collapsed
6. VULNERABILITIES FOR
FLOODS IN MUMBAI
1)
Climate change and heavy rains
2)
Rising sea levels
3)
Extensive reclamation and faulty zoning regulations
4)
Outdated building regulations
5)
Faltering drainage systems
6)
Increase in impermeable surface area
7. AREAS VULNERABLE TO FLOODING
Flooding Spots : 266
Chronic Flooding spots: 55
Slum Localities Within High Tide Line : 57M
8. “MAKING CITIES RESILIENT” CAMPAIGN
One of the current projects ongoing in the city of Mumbai initiated by United Nations International Strategy
for Disaster Reduction (UN-ISDR) is the “Making Cities Resilient : My city is getting ready” campaign.
Launched in 2010, it addresses issues of the local governance and urban risk. It entered its second phase
2012-2015; based on the success and stock taking by partners and participating cities in the first phase
(2010-2011), the campaign will continue and shift its focus to implementation support, city-to-city learning
and co-operation, local action planning and monitoring of progress in cities.
MCGM- Municipal Corporation Of Greater Mumbai ( BMC ) works with the support of UNISDR
9. ISSUES TO BE SOLVED
OBJECTIVES
1) Provide State of Art Infrastructure
2) International Financial Centre
3) Eco friendly City
4) Build Disaster Resilient City
10. 1. MEASURES INITIATED TO MITIGATE FLOODING OF RIVERS
Mithi River : Construction Of 7.4 Km
Long RCC retaining wall .
Construction Of 25 m long and 4.5 m high
weir to discharge water .
Dahisar River : Training Of 1800 m of
river.
Poisar River : Training Of 3550 m of
river
Oshivara River : Widening And Training
Of 3 water courses
11. 2. AUGMENTING STORM WATER DRAINAGE SYSTEM
SWD designed for rainfall of 50mm/hr. System being cleaned to the bottom-most
level since 2006.
Rehabilitation of old drains, particularly in the Island City.
Installation of 9 storm water pumping stations in progress. 2 Pumping Stations
already commissioned.
Portable dewatering pumps installed at flooding spots.
12. 3. INSTALLATION AUTOMATIC WEATHER STATIONS & FLOW GAUGES
35 automatic weather stations installed for real time rain
fall intensity
The data is monitored, analyzed and the warnings are
issued of flooding
Flow Gauges installed upstream of Mithi River to monitor
water flow and issue warning to population living down
stream.
13. 4. ESTABLISHMENT OF EMERGENCY OPERATION CENTRES
State of the Art Emergency
Operation Center at Municipal
Head Office & at all Wards
Operational 24 x 7
Latest Communication Systems
Early Warning System
15. CAMPAIGN FOCUS AREAS 2012-2015
Know More and Commit: sign up more local governments and national government support for
resilient cities
Invest wiser, Build safer: implementation- city to city learning and capacity building, handbooks and
guidelines
Benchmarking and reporting: Local Government Self Assessment Tool and Resilient Cities Report
Emphasis on partnerships and UNISDR capacity as a platform and knowledge management hub
16. GOVERNMENT RECOVERY PLAN
ACTIONS BY MCGM
Operates a control room - the Main Centre of Communication
Discharge pumps – 196 nos. deployed to discharge water
Search and rescue teams-6 kept ready under the fire brigade
Personnel from Civil Defence-600 and 10 persons per ward from NGO
500 buses kept ready by the transport service provider
De-siliting of Mithi river - 5.68 lakh cub.m. silt removed pre-2007 and 3.70 lakhs cub.m thereafter
2652 residential and 1148 commercial structures removed
1769 residential and 349 commercial structures rehabilitated
Additional bridges at Kranti Nagar and Kurla-Kalina Road started
17. GOVERNMENT RECOVERY PLAN
ACTIONS BY STATE GOVERNMENT
Active traffic management / diversion when roads are waterlogged
State government hospitals/ supplement municipal hospitals
Home Guards & Civil Defense for disaster management
288 retaining walls in 74 places have been undertaken by the Slum Improvement Board
The Chief Minister of Maharashtra acts as the highest coordinating authority - Chairs a „Monsoon-
preparedness‟ meeting
Regular follow-up meetings by the Chief Secretary and Additional Chief Secretary (Home Department)
18. GOVERNMENT RECOVERY PLAN
ACTIONS BY GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
Hon‟ble Prime Minister sanctioned a special grant of Rs. 1200 crores outside the Jawaharlal Nehru
National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) as 100% subsidy
The work involves widening of drains and construction of pumping stations
Rehabilitation of slums up to 01.01.2000.