Hardeep Singh Puri calls for putting ‘systems in place’ to enhance our emergency response infrastructure

Hardeep-Singh-Puri-NIUA-workshop
Hardeep Singh Puri, Union Minister of State (I/C), MoHUA along with the delegates at Urban Flooding Resilience workshop organised by NIUA

NEW DELHI: The Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Housing and Urban Affairs, Hardeep Singh Puri has called for putting ‘systems in place’ to enhance our emergency response infrastructure to meet large number of ‘inter-related challenges’ stemming from ‘urban flooding’. He was talking to the press after conclusion of a workshop on “Urban Flooding Resilience” on Oct 11 in New Delhi. The work shop was organized by The National Institute of Urban Affair (NIUA). He said, he will hold talks with experts to look at the causation, to put together facts on the recent floods and later look at disaster management in all kinds of urban areas. Puri added, “The idea is to chalk out ways of prevention and mitigation of floods in Indian towns and cities and set into motion the national guidelines on management of urban flooding. While it is not easy to make the guidelines enforceable, flood mitigation and management could be made a reform condition in various flagship missions of the ministry”.

Puri said that at some level, flooding can be an indictment of municipal management, as in lack of dredging and drain cleaning, it can also be caused by the urban heat island effect. He said that the area between natural disaster and man-made blunders is becoming very difficult to define, as much of what appears to be natural is often man-made due to climate change.  “We have to deal with disaster management in the context of robust urbanisation. There are measures that cities can undertake, such as changing the nature of buildings and materials used, ensuring water conservation or planting more trees, and overall design an eco-system that helps prevent and mitigates the impact of floods” he said.

The workshop noted that climate change and increasing urbanisation pose huge challenges in managing urban planning for a sustainable future. Statistics show that flood disasters are one of the most significant in terms of damages and losses. Urbanisation rates are increasing rapidly and it is important to learn how to live with floods by alleviating their consequences, in the present and future. According to NIUA officals the concept can be used to measure and visualize the changes in flood resilience attained by different flood control measures, as well as in future scenarios of population growth, uncontrolled urbanisation or climate change.

(With Inputs of PIB)

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