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Waterlogging mitigation and safe water supply: lessons learnt from low-lying areas of Basirhat municipality, India

Aniruddha Dey (Department of Research and Development, Professional Institute for Development and Socio Environmental Management – Professional Institute for Development and Socio Environmental Management – PRISM, Gobardanga, India)
Sheikh Tawhidul Islam (Institute of Remote Sensing and GIS, Jahangirnagar University, Dhaka, Bangladesh)
Biplabketan Paul (Naireeta Services Pvt. Ltd., Ahmedabad, India)
Swarnabha Bandyopadhyay (Department of Research and Development, Bongs Prayukti International, Kolkata, India)
Piu Sengupta (Department of Women's Empowerment and Development, Professional Institute for Development and Socio Environmental Management – PRISM, Kolkata, India)
Nandini Sanyal (Department of Research and Development, Science Connect Ltd., Dhaka, Bangladesh)
Krishna Prosad Mondal (Institute of Remote Sensing and GIS, Jahangirnagar University, Dhaka, Bangladesh)
Al Jubaer (Institute of Remote Sensing and GIS, Jahangirnagar University, Dhaka, Bangladesh)
Rangeet Mitra (Department of Technical, Bongs Prayukti International, Kolkata, India)

International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment

ISSN: 1759-5908

Article publication date: 13 April 2022

Issue publication date: 20 May 2022

130

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to develop a replicable model that ensures Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage as well as water treatment facilities at the community level by providing total service coverage at community scale. An intervention was implemented in one of the low-lying areas of Basirhat Municipality (West Bengal, India) that included a number of action programs in order to address household- and community-level water-induced challenges.

Design/methodology/approach

A research study was undertaken to identify the root causes of the problems that are generally spawned from geomorphological, hydro-fluvial, climatic factors and processes and the situation becomes complicated when many other cumulative problem-contexts layovers the existing ones. A number of social and technological innovations were tested in the field and this paper critically examined the intervention processes and outcomes. It was implemented through participatory process by involving related stakeholders working at that scale so that necessary public acceptance is received for scaling up, at least, in the similar physical, social, economic and institutional contexts.

Findings

The problem conceptualization process, spatial assessment for contextualizing the problem, design of interventions for different scales, development of project deployment strategies from field-based learnings contributed in developing a total solution based on fusing of household-level technical solutions, social innovations and actions for community engagements towards sustainability. Mobilized community members in addressing local inundation and waterlogging crisis. Satellite image-based maps shown to make them understand the upper-lower connection of drainage. People also developed their own action plans and engaged themselves in resuscitation of an old canal, removed the garbage that resulted in improved drainage conditions in the area.

Research limitations/implications

Pandemic due to COVID 19 and its related prolonged lock down, West Bengal State Assembly Election, closure of municipal governance system due to the forthcoming municipal election, closure of educational institutions, closure of Anganwadi Centre in the field area were the limitations. Due to the lock down, it was difficult for the team to maintain the time frame as well as the budget. As per the Election’s Code of Conduct gets released no public meeting was allowed without permission, people in the vicinity became suspicious, hence movement of the team members got restricted.

Practical implications

Due to the COVID protocols, the team could not organise mass training programs. It was difficult for the team members to commute in public/private transport, hence filed work got impacted. As the team could not access data from the health department, they developed a strategy of generation data on body mass index, mid-upper arm circumferences and waist-to-hip ratios to understand the status of health and nutrition of the community. It was difficult to access the Public Health Engineering Department’s laboratory situated in the municipality for water sample test. Cost escalated due to extension of the project time.

Social implications

During the second phase (wave) when people lost access to health facilities they requested the team to stop field visit. Women’s empowerment through acquiring knowledge and skill on treatment and safe storage of drinking water at home. Men appreciated and recognized this, which improved the status of women in the society. Children after expressing their willingness to learn the new technology of water purification were given handholding training by their mothers and knowledge transfer has taken place in the next generation. Mobilized community members in addressing local inundation and waterlogging crisis. Satellite image-based maps to understand the upper-lower connection of drainage helped them develop their own action plans and engaged themselves in resuscitation of an old canal, removed the garbage that resulted in improved drainage conditions in the area.

Originality/value

Household-level solutions include supply of low cost, easy operable, sustainable water purifiers, community-level solution focused on securing water-related challenges at social/public gathering places and wider catchment area level solutions include the engagement of local communities to drain out stagnant waters by clearing drains, creating/digging small canals through collective actions. Geo-spatial techniques (topographical mapping, spatial survey, water quality tests) along with social methods such as participatory appraisals for gathering information on human health, public awareness campaigns and partnership development with local government agencies were the major activities performed as part of the implementation of interventions. It is imperative to mention that water-related challenges in the low-lying settlement areas of Basirhat Municipality have effectively been addressed by relying on necessary theoretical underpinnings (Disaster risk reduction/humanitarian principles) transmitted through application of scientific techniques and mediated through local people and their agencies.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the Basirhat Municipality Authorities, people of Bhabanipur Daspara of 14-number ward, SEEDS India, Asian Disaster Reduction and Response Network (ADRRN) and RedR UK for supporting us directly and indirectly.

Funding: The research was supported by Elrah, Under Humanitarian Innovation Fund program.

Citation

Dey, A., Islam, S.T., Paul, B., Bandyopadhyay, S., Sengupta, P., Sanyal, N., Mondal, K.P., Jubaer, A. and Mitra, R. (2022), "Waterlogging mitigation and safe water supply: lessons learnt from low-lying areas of Basirhat municipality, India", International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment, Vol. 13 No. 3, pp. 386-403. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJDRBE-08-2021-0106

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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