Water (Oct 2020)

Investigation of Role of Retention Storage in Tanks (Small Water Bodies) on Future Urban Flooding: A Case Study of Chennai City, India

  • N. Nithila Devi,
  • B. Sridharan,
  • V. M. Bindhu,
  • B. Narasimhan,
  • S. Murty Bhallamudi,
  • C. M. Bhatt,
  • Tune Usha,
  • D. Thirumalai Vasan,
  • Soumendra Nath Kuiry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w12102875
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 2875

Abstract

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The Adyar River flowing through Chennai Metropolitan Area (CMA) in Southern India functions as a surplus course of upstream water bodies that are locally known as tanks. During northeast monsoons, the river frequently floods the adjoining city areas. In this study, the impact of dredging and disappearance of tanks on flooding in CMA is analyzed under historical, urbanization, and extreme rainfall scenarios utilizing an urbanization-hydrologic-hydraulic modelling framework. The simulated scenarios highlight the importance of the tanks as a flood control measure for CMA. The major conclusions are (a) dredging the tanks uniformly by 2 m can compensate the increase in flooding due to urbanization by 2050 for 1 in 50-year rainfalls and, (b) for disappearance of tanks, 1 in 50-year rainfall can inundate the city akin to 1 in 100-year rainfalls. The study can be useful for making informed decisions on dredging the tanks, land use planning, and flood control measures for the CMA.

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