On Flood
On Flood
On Flood
China 1935
5)145,000 Yangtze river flood
St. Felix's Flood, storm surge Netherlands 1530
6)More than
100,000
Hanoi and Red River Delta flood North Vietnam 1971
7)100,000
Yangtze river flood China 1911
8)100,000
Heavy rainfall
Huge snow melting
Failures of dams,
barrages etc.,
(koshi)
Landslides causing
blockage of river
Riverine floods
• Slow kinds: Runoff from sustained rainfall or rapid
snow melt exceeding the capacity of a river's
channel. Causes include heavy rains from monsoons
, Unexpected drainage obstructions such as
landslides, ice, or debris can cause slow flooding
upstream of the obstruction.
• Fast kinds: include Flash floods which are much
more dangerous and flow much faster than regular
floods. Result from tropical storms, dam failures or
excessive rain and snow.
Estuarine floods
• Commonly caused by a combination of sea tidal
surges caused by storm-force winds.
Coastal floods
• Caused by severe sea storms, or as a result of
another hazard (e.g. tsunami or hurricane).
Catastrophic floods
• Caused by a significant and unexpected event e.g.
dam breakage, or as a result of another hazard
(e.g. earthquake or volcanic eruption).
• Muddy floods
• A muddy flood is generated by run off on crop land.
EFFECTS
• The damage due to flood may vary with respect to the
magnitude of the flood.
• Thus we can classify the effects as:
Primary effects
• Physical damage - Can range anywhere from
bridges,cars, buildings, sewer systems, roadways,
canals and any other type of structure.
• Casualties - People and livestock die due to drowning.
It can also lead to epidemics and diseases.
Secondary effects
• Water supplies - Contamination of water. Clean drinking
water becomes scarce.
• Diseases - Unhygienic conditions. Spread of
water-borne diseases
• Crops and food supplies - Shortage of food
crops can be caused due to loss of entire
harvest.
• Trees - Non-tolerant species can die from
suffocation
Tertiary/long-term effects
• Economic -, rebuilding costs, food
shortage leading to price increase,
temporary decline in tourism etc.
Greater losses due to flood
Need for control, Measures to be taken
No complete control of flood to zero level
So Flood Management rather than Flood
Control
Classification of control measures
› Structural measures and 2. Non-structural
measures
Storage Reservoir
Detentio Reservoir
Levees
Floodways
Channel Improvement
Watershed Management