Flood

Flood prone area of Odisha

In India, 49.8 million hectares (12.3% of the geographical area) is prone to flood (NRAA, 2013). Because of its long coastline  (482 km), the state of Odisha is often exposed to flood.  Flood is one of the frequently occurring climatic hazards in the state. The decreasing number of a rainy day (>2.5mm) and the increasing number of a heavy rainy day (>62.5 mm), very heavy rainy days (>125 mm per day), and consecutive cumulative rainfall events increase the chance of flooding. Heavy rainfall during monsoon in the catchment area inside the state and the upper catchment of neighboring states also contributes to flooding downstream. The flat topography, drainage congestion, soil erosion, siltation in the rivers, breaching of the embankments, cause severe floods in the river basin and delta area of the state. This problem becomes even more acute in the coastal area when floods coincide with high tide. As a consequence houses, roads and bridges are washed away, crops & livestock are damaged, sometimes lives are lost.

Nearly 1.40 lakh hectares of the total geographical area of the state is prone to flood (OSDMA, 2016). Out of a total of 22 lakh ha of rainfed lowland of Odisha, about 50% are submergence/flood-prone (Singh, 2006). For the people living in riverside, flooding is a regular phenomenon. Based on 47 years (1953 to 1999) data, on average 3.57 m ha of the cultivated area is damaged annually. In the last 100 years, Odisha experienced a flood in 49 years (Jena, 2018). The floods of 1980, 1982, 2001, and 2003 were notable ones that have caused damage to the properties amounting to crores of rupees. In recent days, floods in the years 2006, 2007, and 2008 have caused severe damage to crops, livestock other properties in the state (OSDMA, 2016). The damage of crops due to floods varied from 0.3 lakh tonnes (1985-86) to 7.3 lakh tones (2011-12) in a mild/flash flood year. It is estimated to be higher at 11 lakh tonnes in a severe flood year (1990-91).