Tag: Uttarakhand Floods

  • ‘Nayi zindagi mili’: ITBP rescues workers stuck in flash-flood hit tunnel

    By PTI
    DEHRADUN: Covered in mud, several men were safely pulled out one after the other from a slush-covered tunnel by ITBP personnel in the Tapovan power project area that was swept away by a flash flood triggered by a glacier break in the Chamoli district of Uttarakhand on Sunday.

    In a video of the operation shared by the border force, the rescuers can be seen raising slogans of ‘dum lagakey haisha’ while retrieving a couple of men through the vertical and narrow snout of the tunnel with the help of a rope line.

    Those present at the spot motivated the men in action with ‘bahut badhiya’ and ‘shabaash’, jo ‘bole so nihaal’ and ‘jai ho’ slogans.

    ALSO READ: Uttarakhand flood – 2019 study warned Himalayan glaciers melting at alarming speed

    One of the workers rescued from the tunnel was seen taking a euphoric leap as the ITBP personnel patted his back in recognition of the grit and endurance displayed by him despite being hit by a disaster and being swamped with mud.

    “Apna bhai aa gaya (our brother is back),” said a local who works in the project area as another official summed up the mood in the disaster zone by saying “nayi zindagi mili (those rescued got a new life)”.

    Multiple teams of the force, with personnel wearing protective gear and helmets, were rushed to the Tapovan power project site from their 1st battalion base in Joshimath and the ITBP mountaineering and skiing institute located nearby in Auli to launch search and rescue works.

    ALSO READ: Glacial burst in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district grim reminder of 2013 Kedarnath deluge

    Armed with mountain rescue gear, ropes, pulleys and carabiniers, the ITBP men were seen taking out the workers and putting them on stretchers that they brought along with them.

    ITBP spokesperson Vivek Kumar Pandey said in Delhi that his personnel stationed at the Joshimath base heard a “large bang and screams of people” shortly after 10:45 AM when the tragedy is stated to have struck the two dam sites near the Raini village in Chamoli.

    A flash flood in the Dhauli Ganga river caused large-scale devastation in the upper reaches of the ecologically fragile Himalayas.

    ALSO READ: Uttarakhand glacier burst – Army deploys four columns, medical teams for rescue operations

    “A total of 12 workers have been rescued from the tunnel site till now. There is a second tunnel too where the rescuers are working,” Pandey said.

    Chamoli, about 270 kms from state capital Dehradun, is a border district along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China and it is well known for the Badrinath shrine that is located very close to the last Indian village in Mana.

    The ITBP has a large deployment here as part of its mandate to guard the LAC.

  • As Minister, I was against power projects on Ganga, its main tributaries: Uma Bharti

    Uma Bharti was the Minister of water resources, river development and Ganga rejuvenation during the first term of the Modi government.

  • Uttarakhand floods: PM Narendra Modi okays Rs 2 lakh ex gratia for kin of those dead

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi has approved an ex gratia of Rs 2 lakh each for the next of kin of those who lost their lives due to the avalanche caused by a glacial burst in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli, the Prime Minister’s Office said on Sunday.

    The PMO also said Rs 50,000 would be given to those seriously injured.

    A portion of the Nanda Devi glacier broke off in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district on Sunday, triggering an avalanche and a deluge in the Alaknanda river system that washed away hydroelectric stations and trapped more than 100 labourers who are feared dead.

    ALSO READ: Uttarakhand flood – 2019 study warned Himalayan glaciers melting at alarming speed

    “PM Narendra Modi has approved an ex gratia of Rs 2 lakh each from PMNRF (Prime Minister’s National Relief Fund) for the next of kin of those who have lost their lives due to the tragic avalanche caused by a Glacier breach in Chamoli, Uttrakhand. Rs 50,000 would be given to those seriously injured,” the PMO tweeted.

    The sudden flood in the middle of the day in the Dhauli Ganga, Rishi Ganga and Alaknanda rivers — all intricately linked tributaries of the Ganga — triggered widespread panic and large-scale devastation in the high mountain areas.

    ALSO READ: Glacial burst in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district grim reminder of 2013 Kedarnath deluge

    Two power projects – NTPC’s Tapovan-Vishnugad hydel project and the Rishi Ganga Hydel Project – were extensively damaged with scores of labourers trapped in tunnels as the waters came rushing in.

    Sixteen men were rescued safely from a tunnel in the Tapovan project but about 125 were still missing.

    ALSO READ: Uttarakhand glacier burst – Army deploys four columns, medical teams for rescue operations

    As night fell in the ecologically fragile Himalayas and rescue work in the difficult to access areas became more difficult, there were fears they may be dead.

    Chief Minister Trivendra Singh Rawat said seven bodies were recovered and at least 125 were missing.

  • Uttarakhand flood: 2019 study warned Himalayan glaciers melting at alarming speed

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: A part of the Nanda Devi glacier broke off in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district on Sunday, leading to massive floods, recalling a 2019 study that warned about the dangers of climate change and said Himalayan glaciers have been melting twice as fast since the start of this century.

    The glacier collapse at Joshimath led to a massive flood in the Alaknanda river system and caused large-scale devastation in the upper reaches of the ecologically fragile Himalayas.

    Two years earlier in June 2019, a study spanning 40 years of satellite observations across India, China, Nepal and Bhutan, indicated that climate change is eating the Himalayas’ glaciers.

    The study, published in the journal Science Advances in June 2019, shows that glaciers have been losing the equivalent of more than a vertical foot and half of ice each year since 2000 — double the amount of melting that took place from 1975 to 2000.

    ALSO READ: Glacial burst in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district grim reminder of 2013 Kedarnath deluge

    “This is the clearest picture yet of how fast Himalayan glaciers are melting over this time interval, and why,” said Joshua Maurer, a PhD candidate at Columbia University in the US.

    While not specifically calculated in the study, the glaciers may have lost as much as a quarter of their enormous mass over the last four decades, said Maurer, lead author of the study.

    The study synthesised data from across the region, stretching from early satellite observations to the present.

    The data indicates that the melting is consistent in time and space, and that rising temperatures are to blame, the researchers said.

    Temperatures vary from place to place, but from 2000 to 2016 they have averaged one degree Celsius higher than those from 1975 to 2000, they said.

    ALSO READ: Uttarakhand glacier burst – Army deploys four columns, medical teams for rescue operations

    Researchers analysed repeat satellite images of some 650 glaciers spanning 2,000 kilometres from west to east.

    Many of the 20th-century observations came from declassified photographic images taken by the US spy satellites.

    They created an automated system to turn these into three dimensional (3D) models that could show the changing elevations of glaciers over time.

    The researchers then compared these images with post-2000 optical data from more sophisticated satellites, which more directly convey elevation changes.

    They found that from 1975 to 2000, glaciers across the region lost an average of about 0.25 metres of ice each year in the face of slight warming.

    Following a more pronounced warming trend starting in the 1990s, starting in 2000 the loss accelerated to about half a metre annually.

    Researchers noted that Asian nations are burning ever-greater loads of fossil fuels and biomass, sending soot into the sky, adding much of it eventually lands on snowy glacier surfaces, where it absorbs solar energy and hastens melting.

    They compiled temperature data during the study period from ground stations and then calculated the amount of melting that observed temperature increases would be expected to produce.

    The team then compared those figures with what actually happened.

    “It looks just like what we would expect if warming were the dominant driver of ice loss,” Maurer said.

    The Himalayas are generally not melting as fast as the Alps, but the general progression is similar, the researchers said.

    The study did not include the huge adjoining ranges of high-mountain Asia such as the Pamir, Hindu Kush or Tian Shan, but other studies suggest similar melting is underway there as well.

    The researchers noted that some 800 million people depend in part on seasonal runoff from Himalayan glaciers for irrigation, hydropower and drinking water.

    The accelerated melting appears so far to be swelling runoff during warm seasons, but scientists project that this will taper off within decades as the glaciers lose mass.

    This, the researchers said, will eventually lead to water shortages.

    The study shows that “even glaciers in the highest mountains of the world are responding to global air temperature increases driven by the combustion of fossil fuels,” said Joseph Shea, a glacial geographer at the University of Northern British Columbia in Canada, who was not involved in the study.

    “In the long term, this will lead to changes in the timing and magnitude of streamflow in a heavily populated region,” said Shea.

  • Glacial burst in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district grim reminder of 2013 Kedarnath deluge

    By PTI
    DEHRADUN: The massive flood in the Dhauli Ganga river triggered by a glacial burst in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district on Sunday came as a grim reminder of the Kedarnath deluge of 2013 which led to widespread devastation in the ecologically fragile Himalayan region.

    A devastating natural disaster in the form of torrential rains of unseen magnitude had struck Kedarnath on 16-17 June in 2013.

    The banks of the Chorabari lake in Kedarnath collapsed due to a cloudburst that had resulted in a major flash flood causing widespread destruction in Uttarakhand and led to heavy losses to infrastructure, agriculture lands, human and animal lives.

    ALSO READ: Uttarakhand glacier burst – Army deploys four columns, medical teams for rescue operations

    However, unlike the Kedarnath tragedy which struck after a downpour, the flash flood on Sunday occurred on a bright and sunny morning which helped in relief and rescue operations by police, State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) personnel in the affected areas.

    Contrary to the bad weather that delayed launch of relief and rescue operations after the Kedarnath deluge whose magnitude could not be immediately realised, the clear weather on Sunday allowed helicopters to reach the affected areas quickly.

    Uttarakhand DGP Ashok Kumar said all efforts at the moment are focused on tracing those who went missing after the flood.

    Over 150 labourers working at a power project in Tapovan-Reni are feared dead, an Indo-Tibetan Border Police spokesperson said while quoting the project-in charge.

    Three bodies have been recovered so far.

    According to the Uttarakhand police chief, the power project has been swept away completely.

    Chief Minister Trivendra Singh Rawat also lost no time in rushing to the affected areas of Tapovan and Raini to take stock of the situation on the ground.

    He said relief and rescue operations are being carried out on a war footing in the affected areas.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah are constantly in touch with the chief minister assuring of all possible help.

    Homes along the way of the deluge were swept away as the waters rushed down the mountainsides in a raging torrent.

    There were fears of damage in human settlements downstream, including in heavily populated areas.

    Many villages were evacuated and people taken to safer areas.

    Connectivity with some border posts was “totally restricted” due to a bridge collapsing near Reni village, an ITBP spokesperson said.

  • Uttarakhand floods: Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal says ready to extend all help

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said his government is ready to extend every possible help to people of Uttarakhand where a glacier broke off at Joshimath in Chamoli district on Sunday, leading to a massive flood.

    ALSO READ | Uttarakhand: Four bodies recovered, over 150 missing after glacier burst at Joshimath triggers massive flood

    “The news about the disaster in Chamoli is really worrisome. I pray for everybody’s safety. The Delhi government is ready to send every possible help to people of Uttarakhand in this difficult time,” he tweeted in Hindi.

    चमोली ज़िले से आपदा की खबर बेहद चिंताजनक है, ईश्वर से सभी लोगों की सुरक्षा एवं कुशलता की प्रार्थना करता हूं। इस मुश्किल घड़ी में उत्तराखंड की जनता तक हर संभव मदद पहुंचाने के लिए दिल्ली सरकार तैयार है।
    — Arvind Kejriwal (@ArvindKejriwal) February 7, 2021

    A glacier broke off at Joshimath in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district on Sunday, leading to a massive flood in the Dhauli Ganga river and causing large-scale devastation in the upper reaches of the ecologically fragile Himalayas.

    According to officials, more than 150 labourers working in a power project are missing.