City's drainage conditions continue to worsen
Sukanta Debnath | Sunday, 1 June 2008
The occasional heavy rains that have been pouring over the city for the last fortnight have once again exposed its vulnerability to serious waterlogging and even flooded conditions caused by its dysfunctional drainage system. The rainy season is just starting and if at this early stage of the monsoons conditions can be so bad, one has reason to feel deeply apprehensive about what fate is in store for the millions and millions of commuters of Dhaka city this year at the time of the height of the rainy season. Some people are feeling so worried by the prevailing drainage conditions, they think that long standing and large scale paralysis may occur in city life in the coming months.
Therefore, there is every reason for this government which has been showing real activism in many vital spheres, to take immediate actions to the best of its ability to overcome years of shocking neglect and irresponsibility in improving drainage conditions so that the worst premonition of the residents of the city about their mobility in the coming months can be removed. Indeed, it is possible, even now, to execute contingency plans to improve drainage conditions in the short run. For this purpose, the manmade drainage infrastructures such as sewer lines, storm sewer lines, box culverts and surface drains, will have to be thoroughly cleaned under a crash programme starting right away. Pumps will have to be set up in many places and manned efficiently to pump out rain waters round the clock. The same can work as good mitigation measures in the short run.
Waterlogging in Dhaka city has been posing as a problem since the eighties. Parts of the city get flooded for hours after even a short spell of heavy rains. The movement of traffic becomes very hazardous under these conditions. Automotive vehicles also turn dysfunctional from such situations with water getting inside their exhaust chutes and engines. People have to wade through flooded lanes and by-lanes barefoot and with folded up trousers before they can board a vehicle to take them to their destinations. This waterlogging was sought to be taken care of by various manmade drainage projects. But the effectiveness of these projects was questioned year after year as the waterlogging problem turned worse and worse. This year the problem is showing up at its worst although the rainy season has but only started. Thus, the authorities need to take timely actions to spare the city residents from the great distresses of worse waterlogging or even city floods like that of 2004.
However, for a long lasting solution, the natural drainage conditions of the city must be fully restored. Only decades ago, Dhaka was a naturally protected city from flooding, waterlogging and related problems. This was because the city at that time had a far smaller population and, more significantly, unplanned urbanisation and unconscionable activities had not taken their toll. But now, the situation is completely different. There existed some 26 canals and hundreds of large and small ponds and marshlands or wetlands in and around Dhaka even in the early seventies. But the canals were encroached upon and filled up and only five of them in a very narrowed and precarious state exist now ; the water bodies have been also largely filled up by real estate developers and others to build all kinds of structures on them.
The outcome of these activities has meant depriving the city of its natural drainage system during the monsoon period. The canals used to drain off flood and rain waters naturally and the water bodies played a part in holding excess water. Thus, largely deprived of this natural drainage system, the city these days suffers chronically from waterlogging and flooding. Clearly, actions are needed to be taken on high priority basis to preserve and improve the remaining natural drainage channels and recover the encroached ones.
Therefore, there is every reason for this government which has been showing real activism in many vital spheres, to take immediate actions to the best of its ability to overcome years of shocking neglect and irresponsibility in improving drainage conditions so that the worst premonition of the residents of the city about their mobility in the coming months can be removed. Indeed, it is possible, even now, to execute contingency plans to improve drainage conditions in the short run. For this purpose, the manmade drainage infrastructures such as sewer lines, storm sewer lines, box culverts and surface drains, will have to be thoroughly cleaned under a crash programme starting right away. Pumps will have to be set up in many places and manned efficiently to pump out rain waters round the clock. The same can work as good mitigation measures in the short run.
Waterlogging in Dhaka city has been posing as a problem since the eighties. Parts of the city get flooded for hours after even a short spell of heavy rains. The movement of traffic becomes very hazardous under these conditions. Automotive vehicles also turn dysfunctional from such situations with water getting inside their exhaust chutes and engines. People have to wade through flooded lanes and by-lanes barefoot and with folded up trousers before they can board a vehicle to take them to their destinations. This waterlogging was sought to be taken care of by various manmade drainage projects. But the effectiveness of these projects was questioned year after year as the waterlogging problem turned worse and worse. This year the problem is showing up at its worst although the rainy season has but only started. Thus, the authorities need to take timely actions to spare the city residents from the great distresses of worse waterlogging or even city floods like that of 2004.
However, for a long lasting solution, the natural drainage conditions of the city must be fully restored. Only decades ago, Dhaka was a naturally protected city from flooding, waterlogging and related problems. This was because the city at that time had a far smaller population and, more significantly, unplanned urbanisation and unconscionable activities had not taken their toll. But now, the situation is completely different. There existed some 26 canals and hundreds of large and small ponds and marshlands or wetlands in and around Dhaka even in the early seventies. But the canals were encroached upon and filled up and only five of them in a very narrowed and precarious state exist now ; the water bodies have been also largely filled up by real estate developers and others to build all kinds of structures on them.
The outcome of these activities has meant depriving the city of its natural drainage system during the monsoon period. The canals used to drain off flood and rain waters naturally and the water bodies played a part in holding excess water. Thus, largely deprived of this natural drainage system, the city these days suffers chronically from waterlogging and flooding. Clearly, actions are needed to be taken on high priority basis to preserve and improve the remaining natural drainage channels and recover the encroached ones.