How about the lower Konkan !

What will happen to Mumbai if a cyclone rips through the city?

Written by
Amitav Ghosh
What might happen if a Category 4 or 5 storm, with 240 kmph or higher wind 
speeds, were to run directly into Mumbai? Mumbai’s previous encounters with 
powerful cyclones occurred at a time when the city had considerably less than 1 
million inhabitants; today it is the second-largest municipality in the world 
with a population of over 20 million.In Mumbai, disaster planning seems to have 
been guided largely by concerns about events that occur with little or no 
warning, like earthquakes and deluges: evacuations usually follow rather than 
precede disasters of this kind.With a cyclone, given a lead-up period of 
several days, it would not be logistically impossible to evacuate large parts 
of the city before the storm’s arrival: its rail and port facilities would 
certainly be able to move millions of people to safe locations on the mainland. 
But in order to succeed, such an evacuation would require years of planning and 
preparation; people in at-risk areas would also need to be educated about the 
dangers to which they might be exposed.And that exactly is the rub—for in 
Mumbai, as in Miami and many other coastal cities, these are often the very 
areas in which expensive new construction projects are located.

Property values would almost certainly decline if residents were to be warned 
of possible risks—which is why builders and developers are sure to resist 
efforts to disseminate disaster-related information. One consequence of the 
last two decades of globalization is that real estate interests have acquired 
enormous power, not just in Mumbai but around the world; very few civic bodies, 
especially in the developing world, can hope to prevail against construction 
lobbies, even where it concerns public safety. The reality is that “growth” in 
many coastal cities around the world now depends on ensuring that a blind eye 
is turned towards risk.Even with extensive planning and preparation, the 
evacuation of a vast city is a formidable task, and not only for logistical 
reasons. The experience of New Orleans in the days before Hurricane Katrina, or 
of New York before Sandy, or the city of Tacloban before Haiyan, tells us that 
despite the most dire warnings large numbers of people will stay behind; even 
mandatory evacuation orders will be disregarded by many.In the case of a 
megacity like Mumbai, this means that hundreds of thousands, if not millions, 
will find themselves in harm’s way when a cyclone makes landfall. Many will, no 
doubt, assume that having dealt with the floods of the recent past they will 
also be able to ride out a storm.But the impact of a Category 4 or 5 cyclone 
will be very different from anything that Mumbai has experienced in living 
memory. During the deluges of 2005 and 2015 rain fell heavily on some parts of 
the city and lightly on others: the northern suburbs bore the brunt of the 
rainfall in both cases. The effects of the flooding were also most powerfully 
felt in low-lying areas and by the residents of ground-level houses and 
apartments; people living at higher elevations, and on the upper storeys of 
tall buildings, were not as badly affected.But the winds of a cyclone will 
spare neither low nor high; if anything, the blast will be felt most keenly by 
those at higher elevations. Many of Mumbai’s tall buildings have large glass 
windows; few, if any, are reinforced. In a cyclone, these exposed expanses of 
glass will have to withstand not just hurricane-strength winds but also flying 
debris. Many of the dwellings in Mumbai’s informal settlements have roofs made 
of metal sheets and corrugated iron; cyclone-force winds will turn these, and 
the thousands of billboards that encrust the city, into deadly projectiles, 
hurling them with great force at the glass-wrapped towers that soar above the 
city.Nor will a cyclone overlook those parts of the city that were spared the 
worst of the floods; to the contrary they will probably be hit first and 
hardest. The cyclones that have struck the west coast of India in the past have 
all travelled upwards on a north-easterly tack, from the southern quadrant of 
the Arabian Sea. A cyclone moving in this direction would run straight into 
south Mumbai, where many essential civic and national institutions are located.

The southernmost tip of Mumbai consists of a tongue of low-lying land, much of 
it reclaimed; several important military and naval installations are situated 
there, as is one of the country’s most important scientific bodies—the Tata 
Institute of Fundamental Research. A storm surge of 2 or 3 metres would put 
much of this area under water; single-storey buildings may be submerged almost 
to the roof. And an even higher surge is possible.Not far from here lie the 
areas in which the city’s most famous landmarks and institutions are located: 
most notably, the iconic Marine Drive, with its sea-facing hotels, famous for 
their sunset views, and its necklacelike row of art deco buildings. All of this 
sits on reclaimed land; at high tide waves often pour over the sea wall. A 
storm surge would be barely impeded as it swept over and advanced eastward.A 
distance of about 4 kilometres separates south Mumbai’s two sea-facing 
shorelines. Situated on the east side are the city’s port facilities, the 
legendary Taj Mahal Hotel, and the plaza of the Gateway of India, which is 
already increasingly prone to flooding. Beyond lies a much-used fishing port: 
any vessels that had not been moved to safe locations would be seized by the 
storm surge and swept towards the Gateway of India and the Taj Hotel.At this 
point waves would be pouring into south Mumbai from both its sea-facing 
shorelines; it is not inconceivable that the two fronts of the storm surge 
would meet and merge. In that case, the hills and promontories of south Mumbai 
would once again become islands, rising out of a wildly agitated expanse of 
water. Also visible above the waves would be the upper storeys of many of the 
city’s most important institutions: the Town Hall, Vidhan Sabha, the 
Chhatrapati Shivaji Railway Terminus, the towering headquarters of the Reserve 
Bank of India and the skyscraper that houses India’s largest and most important 
stock exchange.
Much of south Mumbai is low-lying; even after the passing of the cyclone many 
neighbourhoods would probably be waterlogged for several days; this will be 
true of other parts of the city as well. If the roads and rail lines are cut 
for any length of time, food and water shortages may develop, possibly leading 
to civil unrest.In Mumbai, waterlogging often leads to the spread of illness 
and disease: the city’s health infrastructure was intended to cater to a 
population of about half its present size; its municipal hospitals have only 
40,000 beds. Since many hospitals will have been evacuated before the storm, it 
may be difficult for the sick and injured to get medical attention. If Mumbai’s 
stock exchange and Reserve Bank are rendered inoperative, then India’s 
financial and commercial systems may be paralysed.But there is another 
possibility, yet more frightening. Of the world’s megacities, Mumbai is one of 
the few that has a nuclear facility within its urban limits: the Bhabha Atomic 
Research Centre at Trombay. To the north, at Tarapur, 94 kilometres from the 
city’s periphery, lies another nuclear facility. Both these plants sit right 
upon the shoreline, as do many other nuclear installations around the world: 
these locations were chosen in order to give them easy access to water.With 
climate change many nuclear plants around the world are now threatened by 
rising seas. An article in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists notes: ‘During 
massive storms . . . there is a greatly increased chance of the loss of power 
at a nuclear power plant, which significantly contributes to safety risks.’ 
Essential cooling systems could fail; safety systems could be damaged; 
contaminants could seep into the plant and radioactive water could leak out, as 
happened at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.What threats might a major storm pose 
for nuclear plants like those in Mumbai’s vicinity? I addressed this question 
to a nuclear safety expert, M.V. Ramana, of the Program on Science and Global 
Security at Princeton University.
His answer was as follows: ‘My biggest concerns have to do with the tanks in 
which liquid radioactive waste is stored. These tanks contain, in high 
concentrations, radioactive fission products and produce a lot of heat due to 
radioactive decay; explosive chemicals can also be produced in these tanks, in 
particular hydrogen gas. Typically waste storage facilities include several 
safety systems to prevent explosions. During major storms, however, some or all 
of these systems could be simultaneously disabled: cascading failures could 
make it difficult for workers to carry out any repairs—this is assuming that 
there will be any workers available and capable of undertaking repairs during a 
major storm. An explosion at such a tank, depending on the energy of the 
explosion and the exact weather conditions, could lead to the dispersal of 
radioactivity over hundreds of square kilometres; this in turn could require 
mass evacuations or the long-term cessation of agriculture in regions of high 
contamination.’Excerpted with permission from Amitav Ghosh’s The Great 
Derangement: Climate Change And The Unthinkable with permission from Penguin 



   


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