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India's flood risk assessment and mapping with multi-criteria decision analysis and GIS integration

Vijendra Kumar, Yash Parshottambhai Solanki, Kul Vaibhav Sharma, Anant Patel, Deepak Kumar Tiwari, Darshan Mehta

2024Journal of Water and Climate Change19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT India's diverse geography presents significant flood risks, analyzed in this study using geographic information systems and multi-criteria decision analysis. This comprehensive flood risk assessment considers seven parameters: mean annual precipitation, elevation, slope, drainage density (DD), land use and land cover, proximity to roads, and distance to rivers. The findings indicate that flood vulnerability is primarily influenced by rainfall, elevation, and slope, with DD, land use, and proximity to roads and rivers also playing crucial roles. Experts weighed these factors to create a thorough flood risk map using the normalized rank index and normalized weight index, categorizing areas into five risk levels: very high, high, moderate, low, and very low. The study reveals that 3.40% of the area is at very high risk, 32.65% at high risk, 39.72% at moderate risk, 20.97% at low risk, and 3.25% at very low risk. These results highlight how human and natural factors interact to influence flood risk, with vulnerable areas characterized by low elevations, steep slopes, high drainage densities, and proximity to rivers or roads. The findings provide valuable insights for policymakers, scientists, and local authorities to develop strategies to mitigate flood losses across India's varied landscapes.

Topics & Concepts

Flood mythEnvironmental planningEnvironmental resource managementGeographic information systemGeographyRisk analysis (engineering)BusinessCartographyEnvironmental scienceArchaeologyFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementGroundwater and Watershed AnalysisHydrology and Drought Analysis