Why in the news?
- Land Subsidence in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district triggers panic among the local residents.
Land Subsidence in India
- What is it?:
- The gradual or sudden sinking of the Earth’s surface due to natural or anthropogenic causes.
- It results in tilting, cracking of structures, flooding, and long-term land degradation.
- Causes of Land Subsidence in India:
- Natural Factors:
- Tectonic Movements: Himalayan orogenic activity, fault lines.
- Karst Topography: Dissolution of limestone rocks in Meghalaya, Manipur.
- Glacial Retreat: Melting of glaciers leading to voids and sinking ground.
- Anthropogenic Factors:
- Over-extraction of Groundwater (most dominant): Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat.
- Unregulated Mining: Coal (Jharkhand, West Bengal), limestone (Rajasthan, Meghalaya).
- Urbanisation & Infrastructure Load: Rapid construction on unstable soil.
- Riverbank Erosion & Sand Mining: Ganga basin states.
- Natural Factors:
- Major Affected Regions:
- Delhi–NCR: Land subsidence in Gurugram, Faridabad due to groundwater over-extraction.
- Himalayan Towns: Joshimath (Uttarakhand, 2023 crisis), Rudraprayag, Kinnaur.
- Coalfields: Jharia (Jharkhand), Raniganj (West Bengal) due to abandoned mine collapses.
- Indo-Gangetic Plains: Punjab, Haryana, Western UP due to agricultural groundwater stress.
- North-East India: Limestone mining in Meghalaya, Manipur due to karst subsidence.
- Impacts:
- Human Settlements: Cracking of houses, displacement (Joshimath).
- Infrastructure Damage: Roads, railways, dams, and tunnels destabilised.
- Agriculture: Reduced groundwater table, soil compaction, and reduced productivity.
- Flood Risk: Lowered land levels in Bihar and UP increase flood vulnerability.
- Economic Losses: Rehabilitation costs, mining accidents, urban damages.
- Government Response:
- Groundwater Regulation: CGWA notification, Jal Shakti Abhiyan, Atal Bhujal Yojana.
- Joshimath Rehabilitation Plan (2023): ₹165 crore sanctioned for relief.
- Mine Closure Plans: Guidelines for scientific mine closure (MoC).
- Urban Planning: NITI Aayog advisory on Himalayan sustainable development.
- Way Forward:
- Scientific Urban Planning: Restrict construction in fragile zones.
- Water Management: Aquifer recharge, rainwater harvesting.
- Remote Sensing Monitoring: ISRO’s InSAR, GIS-based risk mapping.
- Community Awareness: Early warning systems, disaster preparedness.
- Policy Integration: Link climate change adaptation with land use planning.