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ENVIS Technical Report 123,   August 2017
Frequent Floods in Bangalore: Causes and Remedial Measures
Energy & Wetlands Research Group, Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, Karnataka, 560 012, India.
E Mail: cestvr@ces.iisc.ernet.in, Tel: 91-080-22933099, 2293 3503 extn 101, 107, 113
UNPLANNED URBNAISATION IN BANGALORE: NON-RESILIENT AND UNLIVABLE WITH UNABATED SENSELESS CONCRETISATION

1028% increase in paved surface during 1973 to 2017
Solution: Enough is Enough, DECONGEST BANGALORE.

  • SHIFT MAJOR INSTALLATIONS TO OTHER CITIES IN KARNATAKA,
  • STOP FURTHER INDUSTRIAISATION AND COMMERCIAL ESTABLISHMENTS IN BANGALORE.
  • PROTECT OPEN SPACES – LAKES, PARKS, ETC.
  • STOP FURTHER GROWTH OF DYING CITY – WITH WATER AND OXYGEN SCARCITY
  • BWSSB SHOULD STOP ISSUING NOC (No Objection certificate) TO MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS AS THERE IS NOT SUFFICIENT WATER (either Cauvery water or Groundwater) IN THE CITY.

Bangalore is experiencing unprecedented rapid urbanisation and sprawl in recent times due to unrealistic concentrated developmental activities. This has led to the large scale land cover changes with serious environmental degradation,posing serious challenges to the decision makers in the city planning and management process involving a plethora of serious challenges such as climate change, enhanced emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG), lack of appropriate infrastructure, traffic congestion, and lack of basic amenities (electricity, water, and sanitation) in many localities, etc.


Figure 1: Land use dynamics in Bengaluru

Table 1: Land use dynamics of Bangalore


Area

Land use \ Class

1973

1992

1999

2002

2008

2014

2017

2020

Hectare

Built up

5683

19452

25202

26890

35301

46626

56046

66455

Vegetation

48650

32937

32616

27590

20090

5986

4603

2108

Water

2424

1867

1608

1317

613

527

734

1491

Others

14503

17004

11834

15462

15256

18121

9877

1206

Percentage

Built up

7.97

27.30

35.37

37.74

49.54

65.43

78.65

93.26

Vegetation

68.27

46.22

45.77

38.72

28.19

8.40

6.46

2.96

Water

3.40

2.62

2.26

1.85

0.86

0.74

1.03

2.09

Others

20.35

23.86

16.61

21.70

21.41

25.43

13.86

1.69

 

Urbanisation and loss of natural resources (wetlands and green spaces):  Urbanisation during 1973 to 2017 (1028% concretization or increase of paved surface) has telling influence on the natural resources such as decline in green spaces (88% decline in vegetation), wetlands (79% decline), higher air pollutants  and sharp decline in groundwater table. Figure 1 depicts the unrealistic urban growth during the last two decades. Quantification of number of trees in the region using remote sensing data with field census reveals that there are only 1.5 million trees to support Bangalore's population of 9.5 million, indicating one tree for every seven persons in the city. This is insufficient even to sequester respiratory carbon (ranges from 540-900 g per person per day). Geo-visualisation of likely land uses in 2020 through multi-criteria decision making techniques (Fuzzy-AHP: Analytical Hierarchal Process) reveals calamitous picture of 93% (Table 1) of Bangalore landscape filled with paved surfaces (urban cover) and drastic reduction in open spaces and green cover. This would make the region GHG rich, water scarce, non-resilient and unlivable, depriving the city dwellers of clean air, water and environment.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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