Context:
A recent scientific study finds that several Indian river deltas are sinking due to human-induced land subsidence, worsening flood risks, saltwater intrusion, and land loss.
Key Highlights:
- Affected Deltas
- Ganges–Brahmaputra
- Brahmani
- Mahanadi
- Godavari
- Cauvery
- Kabani
- Over 90% of Ganges-Brahmaputra, Brahmani, and Mahanadi deltas are experiencing subsidence.
- Causes of Subsidence
- Unsustainable groundwater extraction (notably Ganges-Brahmaputra & Cauvery).
- Rapid urbanization and infrastructure development (Brahmani delta).
- Reduced sediment flux due to upstream dams.
- In some cases, subsidence rate exceeds regional sea-level rise.
- Scientific Methodology
- Used InSAR (Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar) data from ESA’s Sentinel-1 satellite (2014–2023).
- Applied Random Forest machine learning model to correlate subsidence with stressors.
- Supplemented with GRACE satellite data for groundwater storage assessment.
- Consequences
- Increased coastal and river flooding.
- Permanent land loss.
- Saltwater intrusion affecting agriculture.
- Damage to infrastructure.
- Ganges-Brahmaputra delta categorized as shifting from “latent threat” to “unprepared diver” (high risk, low preparedness).
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Delta: Depositional landform at river mouth.
- InSAR: Radar-based remote sensing technique detecting ground deformation.
- Sentinel-1: ESA satellite mission for Earth observation.
- GRACE satellites: Measure variations in Earth’s gravity field (groundwater estimation).
- Causes of subsidence:
- Groundwater withdrawal
- Sediment starvation
- Urban load pressure
Relevant Mains Points:
GS 1 – Indian Geography
- Delta formation processes.
- Impact of dams on sediment supply.
- Coastal geomorphology and vulnerability.
GS 3 – Environment & Disaster Management
- Interaction of climate change and anthropogenic factors.
- Flood risk and coastal vulnerability.
- Need for integrated delta management.
- Way Forward
- Regulate groundwater extraction.
- Restore sediment flow through basin-level planning.
- Strengthen coastal zone regulation (CRZ norms).
- Promote climate-resilient delta agriculture.
- Enhance early warning systems and floodplain zoning.
UPSC Relevance:
Highly relevant for GS 1 (Physical Geography) and GS 3 (Environment, Disaster Management). Important for Prelims in context of InSAR, Sentinel-1, GRACE.
