Saturday, 12 December 2015

'Development' and Urban Catastrophe



Chennai Catastrophe and India’s Urban Mess

Tathagata Chatterji
The recent flood havoc in Chennai again bring to the fore the lackadaisical way our cities are planned, built, managed and governed. It could be argued that the deluge that Chennai had to endure for over a week was unprecedented – swept away meteorological records held over the past hundred years and thus could not have been predicted. It could also be argued that better managed cities in developed countries too occasionally get inundated – as Brisbane was in 2011. It is of course easy to take recourse of statistical data and dismiss the entire episode as a freak accident – an occasional sad scene in a romantic comedy - to be forgotten and swept away from the public memory as the streets are spruced-up and shambles of everyday ordinariness returns.
While the above arguments allow our civic officials, administrative bureaucracy and political decision makers live in their delusionary world of short-termism, the floods in big cities are to large extent due to the monstrous, uncontrolled way our cities are shaping up – gobbling up flood plains, wet lands, swamps and marshes in their outer peripheries, chocking drains, dumping wastes and turning rivers into sewers. The Population of the extended Chennai Metropolitan Area has almost doubled over the past thirty years, from 4.6 million in 1981 to 8.65 million in 2011. While population increase had been rather modest within the municipal limits of Chennai city, much of the growth has come about at the rural areas and satellite towns at the peri-urban fringe of the city, often disregarding the fragile eco system of the region, filling lakes, salt pens, and drainage aquifers. The most dynamic developments could be seen along the southern fringe, which includes the OMR (Old Mahabalipuram Road) – the famed IT hub of the city. The economic boom of Chennai, powered by growth in IT services and the automobile industry has contributed to astronomical rise in real estate rates and has put great pressure on land supply. Needless to say, most of these developments have come about by circumventing the Master Plan, Coastal Regulatory Zone, Environment Act and other development control guidelines, through the unholy nexus between the contractors-builders-civic officials and politicians. The environmental implications are here for all of us to see.
Chennai however is not alone in facing the nature's fury for man’s folly. Mumbai gets submerged with tiresome regularity, year after year, so do Kolkata, Dhaka, Bangkok, Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City and Manila. Cyclone Hud-hud ravaged Vishakhapatnam a few months back, as did Cyclone Alia batter the coasts of Bengal in 2009. Connect the dots and risk pattern of floods, tropical cyclones and storm surges facing the dense coastal settlements of Asia emerge. Recent inundation of Chennai is part of this dismal scenario that the Climate scientists and international agencies like the World Bank and the United Nations had been warning since 2007. In India, the National Disaster Management Authority has framed Urban Flood Guidelines which however are yet to be integrated with the Master Plans and City Development Plans in Chennai and most other cities confronting the risks. We have a plethora of plans but no clear cut integrated approach towards their implementation.
The extended metropolitan belt of Chennai, spans across three districts, covers 1189 square km area, includes the metropolitan corporation of Chennai city and seven other municipalities and several village panchayets. There are proposals to expand the boundary of the metropolitan region to a giant megalopolis of 8878 sq.km – to match those of its regional rivals Bangalore and Hyderabad. Currently it is the fourth largest urban-economy of India and has a population of over 8.65 million – that is larger than many smaller European countries like Austria or Switzerland. But the question is, who is really responsible for managing and governing this mega-urban region; is it the Chief Minister of Tami Nadu or the Mayor of Chennai? And then there is a plethora of agencies which provide the piped services or run the transportation networks.
In the best managed cities in the world, it is usually the Mayors, who call the shots. But overlapping jurisdictions and tangled interfaces has made the job of managing the big cities particularly messy in India. Unless we address these structural deficiencies in our planning and governance system, the chances of building resilience of our cities against natural disasters will continue to remain problematic. 

Professor, School of Planning & Architecture, Vijayawada

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