Title: Bangladesh in Flood'
1Bangladesh in Flood.
2Ganges/Brahmaputra/Meghna compared with other
large rivers (Hofer Messerli, 2006)
3Floods in Bangladesh Key Questions (Hofer
Messerli (2006)
4Main physiographic units of Bangladesh (Hofer
Messerli, 2006)
- Floodplain
- Often unstable, 2-5m relief.
- Deltaic Plain Low gradients and complex river
channels - Tidal Floodplains
- Poldered and level. Often flooded by rainfall.
- Piedmont
- Gentle alluvial plains subject to flash floods
5Causes of Floods in Bangladesh (Hofer Messerli,
2006)
- Floods are often produced through combinations of
factors - Hughes (1994) a key feature of flooding in
Bangladesh is that each flood is different
6Types of Flooding in Bangladesh
- Flash Floods Due to heavy rainfall over the
hills. Damage may be due to rapid flow
(especially if embankments are breached) or crop
submergence. - River Floods From Himalayan snow melt and
monsoon rainfall on mountains and plains. This
especially affects the active floodplain. Causes
most crop damage when early (June) - especially
on the Brahmaputra-Meghna - or when late (damage
along all rivers). - Rainwater Floods due to heavy rainfall in
Bangladesh- effects meander floodplains and old
estuarine land. - Coastal floods cyclone related tidal surges.
Decreased sediment influx to the delta, natural
subsidence ans sea level rise exacerbate. - Timing Early floods (April-June) destroy boro
rice before harvesting and young aus rice. - High Floods Late July/August - damage aus rice
Jute. Good for aman rice unless flow rise gt
15cm/day. - Late Floods after mid-August - affect
transplanted aman rice.
7Types of flooding in Bangladesh (Hofer
Messerli, 2006)
- River floods most common.
-
- Ganga
- Brahmaputra floods long rise times.
- Meghna-
- shorter rise times
8Normal Flood extent in Bangladesh (Hofer
Messerli, 2006)
- On average 20 country is flooded annually.
- 66 cultivable land is susceptible to flooding
- 25-33 Cultivated land flooded annually
- 1994 0.28 land reported as flooded 1998 68.
- Annual floods (Barsha) are generally regarded as
beneficial. - Deep floods (bonna) are not!
9Cropping Cycles in Bangladesh
- Related to the monsoon
- Kharif1 - pre monsoon to monsoon
- Kharif2 Monsoon to post monsoon
- Rabi (dry season) farming.
- Crops
- Aus rice (sown April) and harvested in the full
monsoon during peak flood risk. - Aman Rice comes in two varieties
- Deep water Aman - planted on lowland
- Transplanted Aman (HYV) which is transplanted
half way through the cycle as floods recede, then
rain-fed. If transplantation is too late yields
are low, too early and flood damage risks. - Boro rice - dry season, flood free - uses
residual moisture. - Fisheries are also strongly dependent on the
flood cycle
10Rice Wheat crop calendar in relation to
flooding (Brammer)
11Effects of flood timing on agriculture
12Bangladesh Flood affected areas in 1987
131998 Flood
141998 Flood
151998 Flood
16Bangladesh Flood Affected areas in 1998
- The map looks at the WHOLE monsoon season in
1998. Humid monsoon associated with La Niña. - The floods were the longest duration and most
devastating in 100 years. 50 country was
inundated by up to 3m for 67 days or more. - Simultaneous high river peaks, 7-11 Sept. High
tidal surges flash floods river floods - Continuous/widespread rains in July-August.
17Extent of flooded areas in Bangladesh, 1954-2004
(Hofer Messerli, 2006)
18Maximum daily Q per year for rivers in the basin
(Hofer Messerli, 2006)
- Many of the trends are NOT statistically
significant though.
19Downstream response to Severe Bagmati River
floods in Nepal (Hofer Messerli, 2006)
- Reaction to floods in Nepal (600km upstream) was
small. Flood wave had been attenuated. - Extraordinary flood in Himalayan foothills had
little effect on the floods in Bangladesh. - Qp for Meghna coincided with peak rainfall in
Bangladesh. - Tista Brahmaputra remained at average levels
associated with Bangladesh rainfall.
20Relationship between Flow and suspended load in
the three rivers for different time periods.
(Hofer Messerli, 2006)
- Complex relation between Q and Qsusp. Best
relation for Ganga, less so for Brahmaputra and
non-existent for the Meghna. - Ganga Four trend lines quite different. Rising
curve is NOT chronological. - Brahmaputra Position of the trend lines is
similar- highest the earliest. - Meghna Trend lines almost horizontal gt no
trend/relationship.
21Changing courses of the Brahmaputra. (Messerli
Hofer, 1995)
- The long term variability of the Brahmaputra
course is related - High rates of sedimentation
- Unstable braided channel form
- The rivers migrate by avulsion and siltation of
braided channels. - In 1988 the Meghna created new channel 45m deep
and 0.5 miles from its previous main channel. - Earthquakes also cause instability of channels.
- Uplift and subsidence increase the likelihood of
channel migration. - The course changes of the Brahmaputra are most
likely related to seismicity in the long term. - The 1951-56 Assam earthquakes have been
associated with increased sediment loads. - Dynamically unstable river system is likely to
show periods of increased flood instability.
These natural factors are likely to outweigh the
effects of upstream catchment degradation.
22The Geomorphology of the Brahmaputra (Thorne et
al 1993)
- The Brahmaputra has a mean annual peak flow in
early August of 65,500 cumecs. - The Ganges peaks in late august at c
51,625cumecs. - The Brahmaputra channel is braided
- Largest islands called Chars. These divide the
flow into anabranches . - Three orders of channel exist in the braid
system - The whole channel first order
- Anabranches (2nd order) which change on an annual
basis - 3rd order channels branch around braid bars and
change form within seasons. The channel
migrates by right bank erosion. - The dominant discharge (that which carries most
sediment) is c 38000 cumecs. - Bankfull discharge is 65000 cumecs.
- The 1987/88 floods did not give peaks in the
sediment yields as they are relatively rare. - Flows over 60000 cumecs carry about 8 total
sediment sediment.
23Dominant Discharge Plot Dominant Discharge is
that which, over the period of flow data, carries
the most sediment. (Thorne et al 1993)
24(Thorne et al 1993)
- Upper Bar Level Chars - above river level and
vegetated, used for agriculture. - Braid Bars Loose sediment and annual immature
vegetation cover plus seasonal cropping. No
permanent habitation. - Dunes c 15m high
- and 1000m long - submerged all but lowest flows,
and migrate c 100m/day downstream. - The dominant discharge covers the level of the
braid bars but not Chars. - The braid bars are thus adjusted to the
dominant discharge. - Flows between this level and bankfull carry
most sediment. - The Char and braid bar tops form a sinuous
profile which includes areas of channel widening
and convergence.
Dominant Q
25The hourglass planform consists of bar
reaches where sediment is deposited and stored
and Nodal reaches which are narrow and deep and
where sediment is transported. Length of the
island reaches is scaled to the channel width.
NODE
BAR REACH
NODE
26Hour-Glass morphology on the Brahmaputra
BAR REACHES
NODES
27Brahmaputra river geomorphology-3 (Thorne et al
1993)
- Location of the spikes in retirement
frequencies closely match the Char/Node pattern
and scale at c 6-10km. - This suggests that growth of braid bars in the
Island reaches drives bank erosion and the
location of embankment breaches. As mid-channel
braid bars grow, flow is deflected to the
Brahmaputra banks causing erosion. - Thus the geomorphology of the river gives us
insights into the distribution of erosion and
flood hazard by embankment erosion.
28Braid instability, erosion of banks displaces
population.
29The Flood Action PlanProposals (Brammer, 1990)
30The Flood Action Plan
- The main arguments for Flood Mitigation revolve
around the issue of embankments. - The 1989 UNDP study proposed preparation of a
Flood Master Plan to embank the rivers and create
Compartments along the river over a 15 year
period. The World Bank produced the Action Plan
for Flood Control. - The Flood Action Plan aimed to improve quality of
life and environment for agriculture. - The plan proposes embankments to proceed
downstream to allow lower channels to adjust to
increased flows. - Dykes would be installed in the Brahmaputra to
cause siltation of braids and reduce the number
and width of the total channel. - Compartments would be built behind the channel
embankments with sluices in the main embankments
to allow artificial flooding to natural flood
levels and to help fisheries. - Deep flooding of compartments would occur with
exceptional rains or floods greater than the
design recurrence intervals. - These are Dhaka - 500-1000 years main river
embankments - 100 years Agricultural land -
10-100years.
31The hourglass planform consists of bar
reaches where sediment is deposited and stored
and Nodal reaches which are narrow and deep and
where sediment is transported. Length of the
island reaches is scaled to the channel width.
NODE
BAR REACH
32Flood Action Plan Proposals-2
- Two options for embankments were suggested
- 1) Close to the river, which would protect more
of the population and land. Cost was estimated at
10 billion in 1990. - 2) set back 5km which would require less
management and would cost less at 5 billion, but
would sacrifice more land and people. - The huge scale of the rivers - at 20km wide,
unstable braid plains subject to major avulsions
would give huge maintenance costs. - The existing Right Embankment of the Brahmaputra
is having to be repeatedly retired. If the whole
river length of embanked this problem would be
magnified. - Confinement in a narrower embanked channel would
increase velocity and depth of flow of floods and
could thus magnify pressure on banks - so huge
embankment protection works would be required. - Failure would be even more catastrophic than is
currently the case. - Annual maintenance costs were estimated at 200m.
Set back embankments would leave 6.3m people
exposed to higher flooding. - In 1987 the UNDP review ascribed embankment
failures to inadequate design and maintenance.
Problems of stone supply for embankment support
are huge as Bangladesh has very little rock
available. - The Flood Action Plan came under attack for its
cost, likely impact on river dynamics and
projected effects on agriculture and fisheries.
The 1993 floods of the Mississippi, the worlds
most controlled river also undermined the
technical fix- hard engineering approach.
33The Flood Action Plan Problems
- Custers (1992) discusses problems associated with
the Flood Action Plan. - The International Rivers Network believe that
embankments will increase the risk of devastating
floods if they fail and that the high flood
levels are pushed downstream (the replacement
effect). - They argue that in the long term embankments are
self defeating as siltation may cause the need to
keep raising the embankment height. - Channel migration could also disrupt the flood
action plan. - The evidence of the success of compartmentalisatio
n is mixed. Many have become waterlogged and
the numbers of fish species has declined. - Custers argues that the elite stand to gain most
from the Flood Action Plan through construction
firms, the richest farmers and the HYV rice
users. - He argues that the Flood Action Plan is part of
the aid and consultancy game where autocratic
imposition occurs.
34Impacts of the Flood Action Plan Custers (1992)
35Hydrological and fisheries impacts of flood
control projects Asaduzzaman (1994)
36Alternatives to the Flood Action Plan
- 1. Upstream storage dams
- 40 billion would need to be spent on storage and
7 dams the size of the Bhakra Dam in India would
be needed to reduce peak flows by 10 entering
Bangladesh. Potential conflicts between flood
storage, HEP and irrigation functions would be
likely. - Dams would be located in seismically active zones
and there would be a rapid siltation problem. - Political co-operation would be needed as the
catchments are largely outside Bangladesh. - Also much of the damaging rainfall is below the
potential dam sites within Bangladesh. - 2. Floodplain storage
- 12-15 large compartments would be needed to
absorb 10 excess flow and these would cover
24,000-30,000 km2. (This is 15-20 the area of
Bangladesh) and thus politically not feasible. - Natural basins already absorb some floodwater.
- Diversion of floodwater would result in channel
siltation.
37Alternatives to the Flood Action Plan
- 3. Draw down of groundwater
- In the dry season to increase capacity for
groundwater storage in the Monsoon. - Full use would reduce Ganges monsoon flow by 50
and increase dry season flow. Drawdown would
allow water storage in alluvial fan gravels of
the Terai. - Jones estimates that 2500 wells flowing at 1500
cumec/hr for 240 days/year would reduce 21
billion cubic meters for groundwater storage and
this would absorb 10 Ganges flow. - This would be less effective for the Brahmaputra
due to its higher rainfall and less irrigation
potential in the basin. - There is little evidence that this strategy would
decrease peak flood flows. - Catchment infltration rates would still be low
compared to heavy rainfalls. - Deep drawdown might also dry many wells and
reduce flow to Boro rice crops. - 4. Small Scale Irrigation
- This strategy is favoured by the World Bank.
Large scale water control projects have low
rates of return .
38Effect of embankments on soil fertility
(Alexander et al 1998)
- Soil on top of the embankment is known as fuldi
series and that on the lower elevations know as
Matlab. - Soil fertility elements were sampled for both
soil types within and outside the embankments. - Over the six years since the embankment scheme
began significant differences in soil fertility
had developed in many parts of the scheme. - Significantly lower available phosphate,
potassium and sulphur in both topsoil and subsoil
outside the embankment. - This result was despite addition of potash
fertiliser within the embankments. - The embanked areas were receiving less flood
borne silts, which renew nutrient inputs. - The study suggests that there could be long term
soil fertility issues arising from flood
protection schemes using embankments.