Geomatics, Natural Hazards & Risk (Dec 2017)

Satellite-based assessment of the catastrophic Jhelum floods of September 2014, Jammu & Kashmir, India

  • C. M. Bhatt,
  • G. S. Rao,
  • M. Farooq,
  • P. Manjusree,
  • A. Shukla,
  • S. V. S. P. Sharma,
  • S. S. Kulkarni,
  • A. Begum,
  • V. Bhanumurthy,
  • P. G. Diwakar,
  • V. K. Dadhwal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19475705.2016.1218943
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
pp. 309 – 327

Abstract

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The state of Jammu and Kashmir in North India experienced one of the worst floods in the past 60 years, during the first week of September 2014. In the present study, multi-temporal synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite images acquired from Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellite RISAT-1 and Canadian satellite Radarsat-2 during the peak flood period (08th–23rd September 2014) are used for extraction of flood disaster footprints, mapping spatial and temporal dynamics of flood inundation and assessing the disaster impact. With the aid of pre- and post-flood satellite images, coupled with hydro-meteorological data, the unprecedented flood situation is analyzed. It is estimated that about 557 km2 of the Kashmir Valley's geographical area was inundated. Bandipora, Pulwama, Srinagar, Baramulla and Budgam were the worst flood affected districts, having more than 50 km2 of their area affected by flood waters. Of the total inundated area, about 80% of the area under agricultural activity was submerged, followed by built-up areas constituting about 12% of geographical area. About 22 lakh people in 287 villages were affected by floods. The flood waters persisted in the northern and central part of the valley for more than two weeks.

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