Case Study: Bangladesh
- Bangladesh is mostly a low-lying, flat delta
- It is vulnerable to any changes in sea levels and flooding because:
- 75% of the country is less than 10 m above sea level
- The Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers converge in Bangladesh
- 80% of the country sits on the low-lying floodplains of the delta
- The country is already prone to flooding and tropical monsoon conditions
- Seasonal flooding is normal and necessary to provide fertile soil and irrigation
- But the size, intensity, and frequency of these events have increased
- The monsoon rainfall is predicted to rise by 40% by 2030
- In 1998, 75% of Bangladesh was flooded, making 30 million people homeless
- Over 1,000 people died
- 700,000 hectares of crops were destroyed
- Bangladesh's Flood Action Plan, 1988, aimed to protect the country from future flooding
- It was funded by the World Bank and a number of HICs
- Measures included:
- Monitoring of flood levels
- Effective flood warning systems
- Construction of levees and embankments, which also provide protection from flooding by tidal waves and storm surges
- Building 200 flood shelters on stilts for evacuated people
- Creating flood water storage systems
- Diverting flood water from buildings with 5000 km of drainage channels
- Reducing deforestation
- The FAP was not considered a success because:
- Many parts of the project were never completed, including the dams and floodwater storage areas, due to inadequate funding and corruption
- There was later a recognition that some flooding was necessary to maintain agriculture in many areas
- 8 million people were forced to move to accommodate the FAP constructions
- Changing the channel upstream meant that areas downstream suffered more
- The government cannot afford the maintenance costs