DP - PM Unit - 2
DP - PM Unit - 2
DP - PM Unit - 2
1. Disasters classification
2. natural disasters (floods, draught, cyclones, volcanoes,
earthquakes, tsunami, landslides, coastal erosion, soil erosion, forest
fires etc.);
3. manmade disasters (industrial pollution, artificial flooding in urban
areas, nuclear radiation, chemical spills, transportation accidents,
terrorist strikes, etc.);
4. hazard and vulnerability profile of India,
5. mountain and coastal areas,
6. ecological fragility.
Disasters classification
Natural disasters
1. Disasters that occur in nature, without human provocation.
2. Natural disasters are those which occur as a natural process of weather patterns or
other factors affecting Earth
floods, draught, cyclones, volcanoes, earthquakes, tsunami, landslides, coastal
erosion, soil erosion, forest fires
Manmade disasters / Artificial Disasters –
1. Disasters that occur due to human activities
2. Anthropogenic hazards may adversely affect human, other organisms and biomes and
ecosystems The frequency and severity of hazards are key elements in some risk
analysis methodologies
industrial pollution, artificial flooding in urban areas, nuclear radiation, chemical
spills, transportation accidents, terrorist strikes
FLOODS
Flood is a state of high water level along a river channel or on the coast that
leads to inundation of land, which is not usually submerged. Floods may
happen gradually and also may take hours or even happen suddenly without
any warning due to breach in the embankment, spill over, heavy rains etc
Floods are sudden and temporary inundation of a large area as an
overflowing of rivers or reservoirs
A flood occurs when the volume of water in the river becomes greater than
bank full stage, the extra water spills over the banks and spreads in sheets all
along and away from the banks governed by available slope. This condition is
called flood
INTRODUCTION
Floods are relatively slow in occurrences and often, occur in well-identified
regions and within expected time in a year.
Commonly occur when surface run-off exceeds the carrying capacity of
river channels & streams and flows into the neighbouring low lying flood
plains.
Also caused due to a storm surge in coastal areas, high intensity rainfall for
a considerably longer time period, melting of ice & snow, reduction in the
infiltration rate and presence of eroded material in the water due to higher
rate of soil erosion
Though floods occur frequently over wide geographical area having
disastrous ramifications in many parts of the world, floods in south,
southeast & east Asian countries particularly in China, India, Bangladesh
are frequent and equally disastrous
TYPES/ CLASSIFICATION OF FLOODS
SLOW ONSET FLOODS - these usually last for a relatively longer
period, it may last for one or more weeks, or even months
RAPID ONSET FLOODS - these last for a relatively shorter period,
they usually last for one or two days only
FLASH FLOODS - they may occur with in minutes or
a few hours after heavy rainfall, tropical storm, failure of dams or levees or
release from dams, and it causes the greatest damages to society
MAGNITUDE & FREQUENCY OF FLOODS
Magnitude – discharge of water
from a channel at a particular
point, discharge is commonly
indicated by means of
hydrograph.
Hydrograph is a plot between
discharge of a stream in cubic
meters/ sec or cubic feet / sec
over a period of time (day or
week or month or year )
Studying hydrographs of river
for long periods will help in
predicting the flood duration,
intensity and return period
FLOOD HAZARD IN INDIA
National flood commission identified 40 million hectares of land as flood
prone in India
India receives an annual rainfall of 1200mm , 85% of which is concentrated
in 3-4 months i.e June to September.
Assam, West Bengal & Bihar are highest flood prone states
Punjab & Uttar Pradesh are vulnerable to occasional floods
Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana & Punjab are inundated to flash floods.
Southern States experiences floods during monsoon season
Ganga basin, Brahmaputra basin - north western region
RISK REDUCTION MEASURES
MAPPING OF FLOOD PRONE AREAS
This is a primary step involved in reducing the risk of the region.
Historical records gives floods inundation areas & period of occurrence &
extent of coverage.
Warning can be issued looking into earlier marked heights of water levels
LAND USE CONTROL
This will reduce danger of life & property waters inundate the flood plains
& costal areas.
In areas where people already have built their settlements, measures
should be taken to relocate to better sites so as to reduce vulnerability.
Important facilities like schools, hospitals, should be built in safe area.
RISK REDUCTION MEASURES
CONSTRUCTION OF ENGINEERED STRUCTURES
Doing this in flood plains & strengthening of structures to withstand flood forces &
seepage, buildings should be constructed on an elevated area, if necessary build
on stilts or platform.
Reforestation will decrease the runoff, protection of vegetation,, clearing of debris
from streams & other water holding areas, conservation of ponds & lakes
Improvement of embankments, dams & channels,
FLOOD MANAGEMENT
Systematic planning for flood management commenced with 5 yr plan launched in
1954 along with NATIONAL PROGRAM OF FLOOD MANAGEMENT
Last 48 yrs structural & non structural measures have been adopted.
Important facilities like schools, hospitals, should be built in safe area.
CAUSES OF FLOODS
NATURAL CAUSES
Heavy rainfall
Snow melt
Relief
Coastal flooding
HUMAN CAUSES
Deforestration
Poor farming
Poor water management
Population pressure
ADVERSE EFFECTS OF FLOODS
Casualties - loss of life, livestock, outbreak of epidemics,
4 Felt indoors by many, feels like a truck has struck the building 3.5 Felt by many people
5 Felt by nearly everyone, many people awakened, swaying trees and pole may be observed
6 Felt by all, many people run outdoors, furniture moved slightly damage occurs
4.5 Some local damage
7 Everyone runs outdoors, poorly built structures considerable damage
Development of cyclones
Formation & initial development state
Fully matured
Weakening or decay
Development of cyclones
Formation & initial development state
Four atmospheric/oceanic conditions are necessary for the formation of a cyclone namely:
A warm sea temperature in excess of 26 degree centigrade, to a depth of 60 meters,
which provides abundant water vapour in the air by evaporation.
High relative humidity (degree to which the air is saturated by water vapor) of the
atmosphere to a height of about 7000 meters, facilitates condensation of water vapor in
to droplets and clouds, releases heat energy and induces drop in pressure.
Atmospheric in stability (an above average decrease of temperature with altitude)
encourages considerable vertical cumulus cloud convection when condensation of rising
air occurs.
A location of atleast 4-5 latitude degrees from the Equator allow the influence of the
force due to the earth’s rotation (Coriol is force) to take effect in inducing cyclonic wind
circulation around low pressure centres.
Development of cyclones
Fully matured
The main feature of a fully mature tropical cyclone is a spiral pattern of highly turbulent
giant cumulus thunder cloud bands.
These bands spiral in wards and form a dense highly active central cloud core which raps
around a relatively calm zone. This is called the “eye” of a cyclone.
The eye looks like a black hole or a dot surrounded by thick clouds. The outer
circumference of the thick cloud is called the ‘eyewall’.
Weakening or decay
A tropical cyclone begins to weaken as soon as its source of warm moist air is abruptly
cut off.
This is possible when the cyclone hits the land, or the cyclone moves to a higher altitude
or when there is the interference of another low pressure.
Depending on their track on the warm tropical sea and proximity to land, a cyclone may
last for less than 24 hours to more than 3 week.
On an average the life cycle of a cyclone takes six days.
Cyclones in India
SlNo Year Area
Death toll
1 1971 Eastern Coast
9658
2 1972 Andhra Pradesh and Orissa
100
3 1977 Chennai, kerala& Andhra Pradesh 14,204
Engineered structures
structures need to be built to with stand wind forces.
Good site selection is also important.
Majority of the buildings in coastal areas are built with locally available materials and have no
engineering inputs.
Possible Risk Reduction Measures
Good construction practice should be adopted such as:
Houses can be strengthened to resist wind and flood damage. All elements holding
the structures need to be properly anchored to resist the up lift or flying off of the
objects. For example, avoid large over hangs of roofs, and the projections should
be tied down.
Arow of planted trees will act as a shield. It reduces the energy.
Buildings should be wind and water resistant
Buildings storing food supplies must be protected against the winds and water.
Protect river embankments. Communication lines should be installed underground.
Provide strong halls for community shelter
Possible Risk Reduction Measures
Flood management–Torrential rains, strong wind and storm range leads to
flooding in the cyclone affected areas. There are possibilities of land slides
too. Flood mitigation measures could be in coorporated
Improving vegetation cover–The roots of the plants and trees keep the soil
intact and prevent erosion and slow run off to preventor lessen flooding.
The use of tree planted in rows will act as a wind break. Coastal shelter belt
plantations can be developed to break severe wind speeds. It minimizes
devastating effects.
The Orissa calamity has also high lighted the need
for urgent measures like shelter belt plantation
along cyclone-prone coastal areas.
Species chosen forth is purpose should not only
be able to with stand the impact of strong
cyclonic winds, but also check soil erosion
VOLCANOES
Volcanoes are openings in the earth’s crust created when molten material under
the crust is propelled upward through the surface. The magma chamber collects
the magma that is expelled to the surface in an eruption
Destructive : with voluminous lava flows or explosive activity. This usually occurs
when magma is sticky and contains al lot of gas. Hot debris particles called
pyroclastic are expelled during violent explosions. Heavier pieces land near the
crater and lighter pieces can be carried by the wind for hundreds of kms
Non destructive : with little release of solids or magmatic liquid. These eruptions
occur when the magma is more fluid and contains less gas. The solids or magma
rocks and lava cools on its slope
Causes & distribution of volcanoes
Volcanoes are generally found when tectonic plates are diverging or converging
Divergent tectonic plates - A mid-oceanic ridge, for example the mid-Atlantic ridge
has caused by pulling apart
Convergent tectonic plates - The pacific ring of fire has example of volcanoes
caused by coming together
By contrast volcanoes are usually not created when 2 tectonic plates slide past one
another
Plate hypothesis - volcanoes can also form where there is stretching & thinning of
the earth’s crust in the interiors of plates – in east African rift, the wells gray-
clearwater volcanic field & the Rio Grande Rift in north America
Hotspots – volacanoes away from plate boundaries has explained as mantle
plumes, example Hawaii, are postulated to arise from upwelling diapirs with
magma from core-mantle boundary 3000 km deep in the earth
List of volcanoes
1. YELLOWSTONE ERUPTION, 640,000 YEARS AGO magnitude-8 eruptions rocked the
area as far back as 2.1 million years ago, again 1.2 million years ago and most recently
640,000 years agocrater, measuring 30 by 45 miles across (48 by 72 kilometers).
2. HUAYNAPUTINA, 1600
3. KRAKATOA, 1883 140 feet (40 meters) and killed about 34,000 people
4. SANTA MARIA VOLCANO, 1902large crater, nearly a mile (1.5 km) killed as many as
5,000 people.
5. NOVARUPTA, 1912ash into the air, which fell to cover an area of 3,000 square miles
(7,800 square km)
6. MOUNT PINATUBO, 1991eruption ejected more than 1 cubic mile (5 cubic
kilometers) of material into the air and created a column of ash that rose up 22 miles
(35 km) in the atmosphere.
7. AMBRYM ISLAND, 50 AD 50 times since 1774
8. ILOPANGO VOLCANO, 450 AD
9. MOUNT THERA, APPROX. 1610 B.C
10. Nevado del Ruiz 1985 - 23,000 people died
Environmental Impacts of Volcanic Eruptions
Releases a no of toxic gases possibly present in pyroclastic material
Releases Carbon di oxide & sulphur dioxide gas along with hydrogen sulphide,
hydrogen chloride
Carbon di oxide adds to natural greenhouse effects
sulphur di oxide cause acid rains, and sulphuric aerosols reflect solar radiation and
reduce the temperature of earth, also destroy ozone layer
TSUNAMI
Tsunami is a very long wave length wave of water that is generated by sudden
displacement of the seafloor or disruption of any body of standing water. Tsunami
are sometimes called “seismic sea waves”, although they can be generated by
mechanisms other than earthquakes. Tsunami have also been called “tidal
waves”, but this term should not be used because they are not in any way related
to the tides of the earth. Because tsunami occur suddenly often without warning,
they are extremely dangerous to coastal communities
Tsunami is also called seismic sea wave or tidal wave, catastrophic ocean wave
usually caused by a submarine earthquake occurring <50km beneath the seafloor,
with a magnitude >6.5 on the Richter scale. Underwater or coastal landslides or
volcanic eruptions also may cause a tsunami. The term tidal wave is more
frequently used for such a wave, but it is a misnomer, for the wave has no
connection with the tide
Introduction
The term Tsunami derived from Japanese word TSU – HARBOR, NAMI – WAVES
These waves often affect distant shores, originate by rapid displacement of water
from the lake or sea either by seismic activity , landslides, volcanic eruption or
large meteoroid impacts
31 December 1881 An earthquake of 7.9 in the Richter scale in Car 1m tsunamis were recorded at Chennai.
Nicobar Island Entire east coast of India and
Andaman & Nicobar Islands
26 August 1883 Explosion of the Krakatoa volcano in Indonesian, East 2m tsunamis were recorded at Chennai.
coast of India was affected
26 June 1941 An 8.1 Richter scale earthquake in the Andaman East coast of India was affected but no
archipelago. estimates of height of the tsunami is
available
27 November 1945 An 8.5 Richter scale earthquake at a distance of about 12m tsunami was felt at Kandla.
100km south of Karachi West coast of India from north
to Karwarwas affected;.
26 December Banda Aceh, Indonesia; Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra The waves measured around 10 m high
2004 Pradesh, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India; Sri killing
Lanka; Thailand; Malaysia; Kenya; Tanzania The
East cost of India was affected
Adverse Effects / Impacts
Local tsunami events or those < 30 min from the source cause the majority of damage
It is normally the flooding affect of the tsunami that causes major destruction to the human
settlements, roads & infrastructure thereby disrupting the normal functioning of the society
As the waves withdraw towards the ocean they sweep out the foundations of the buildings, the
beaches get destroyed and the houses carried out to sea.
Damage to ports & airports may prevent importation of needed food and medical supplies
Deaths mainly occur because of drowning as water inundates homes, many people get washed
away or crushed by giant waves & some are crushed by the debris
Tsunami flooding caused large scale health problem.
Availability of drinking water has always been a major problem in areas affected by a disaster
Sewage pipes may be damaged causing major sewage disposal problems.
Open wells & other ground water may be contaminated by salt water, debris & sewage
Risk Reduction Measure
Japan has implemented an extensive programme of building tsunami walls of up to 4.5m
high front of populated coastal areas.
Others built flood gates and channels to redirect the water from incoming tsunami’s
Tsunami which hit the island of Hokkaido on july 12,1993 created waves as much as 30m
as tall as 10 story building. The tsunami wall was washed away, but it has slowed down the
impact
Site planning & management
Designation, zoning of tsunami hazard areas for such open-space uses as agriculture, parks
& recreation or natural hazard area is recommended as the first land use planning strategy.
This strategy is designed to keep development at a minimum in hazard areas
Engineering structures
Site selection – avoid building or living within several meters from coastline
Elevated coastal homes – most tsunami waves are <3m in height
Construction of water breakers to reduce velocity of waves
Flood management
Flooding will result from tsunami, flood mitigation could be incorporated
LANDSLIDES or MASS MOVEMENT or LANDSLIPS or MUDSLIPS
Landslide is a geological phenomenon which includes a wide range of ground movements
such as rock falls, deep failure of slopes and shallow debris flows, which can occur in
offshore, coastal & onshore environments. Although the action of gravity is the primary
driving force for a landslide to occur, there are other contributing factors affecting the
original slope stability. Typically, pre-conditional factors build up specific sub-surface
conditions that make the area/slope prone to failure, whereas the actual landslide often
requires a trigger before being released.
Important terminology
Landslide hazard
Potential of occurrence of a damaging landslide within a given area, such damage could
include loss of life or injury, property damage, social & economic disruption or
environmental degradation
Landslide vulnerability
Potential loss to given element within area affected by the hazard, expressed on a scale of
0-1
Vulnerability is shaped by physical, social, economic & environmental conditions
Landslide risk
Probability of harmful consequences the expected number of lives lost, persons injured,
extent of damage to property or ecological systems or disruption of economic activity –
within a landslide prone are.
The risk may be individual or societal in scope, resulting from an interaction between the
hazard and individual or societal vulnerability
Landslide risk evaluation
Application of analyses & judgement to determine risk management alternatives .
Types of landslides
Flowage
By flowage is understood a
downgrade movement of mass
along no definite surface of failure
Mass involved in this type of failure
is primarily unconsolidated or
loosely packed
Result is that the movement is
distributed throughout the mass, in
highly irregular manner
Types of landslides
Sliding
True landslide is a type of mass failure in
which a superficial mass fails by moving as
a whole along a definite surface of failure
Surface of failure may be planar or semi-
circular in outline
Mass above the failure surface is unstable
where as the material lying below is stable
in general
Types of landslides
subsidence
Sinking or settling of ground in
almost vertically downward
direction which may occur
because of removal of natural
support from the underground or
due to compaction of weaker
rocks under the load from
overlying mass
Causes
Natural causes of landslides include
Groundwater pressure acting to destabilize the slope
Loss or absence of vertical vegetative structure, soil nutrients, and soil structures
Erosion of the toe of a slope by rivers or ocean waves
Weakening of a slope through saturation by snow melt, glaciers melting or heavy rains
earthquakes adding loads to barely stable slope earthquake caused liquefaction
destabilizing slopes volcanic erosion landslides are aggravated by human activities
Human causes include:
Deforestation, cultivation and construction, which destabilize the already fragile slopes
Earthwork which alters the shape of a slope or which imposes new loads on an existing
slope
In shallow soils, the removal of deep-rooted vegetation that binds colluviums to bedrock
Construction, agricultural or forestry activities which change the amount of water which
infiltrates the soil
Adverse Effects
Most common elements at risk are the settlements built on the steep slopes, built
at the toe and those built at the mouth of the streams emerging from the
mountain valley
All those buildings constructed without appropriate foundation for a given soil and
in sloppy areas are also at risk.
Roads, rails, electricity, telecommunication lines are vulnerable
Control of mass movement
Drainage
Water presence is the one of the factor that leads to mass movement
Avoid waster content either by surface or sub-surface methods
Construct series of ditches
Backfill the pits on the soil surface with concrete or asphalt to prevent the water
impounding
Cover the slope surface with granular material to remove excess rainfall
Retaining structure
Construct retaining wall and buttresses
Slope reinforcement by rock bolting - Tie up different rock
blocks together
Rock anchors – structural elements made up of cables, bars.
Up to 20-30 m in length
Slope treatment – treating top layers with cement & sand with
1:3 mix proportion
COASTAL EROSION, SOIL EROSION, FOREST FIRES
Introduction
Causes of occurrence
Process of occurrence
Primary & secondary hazards (adverse affects)
Ways to measure
Past events list
Control measures (mitigation measures)
Manmade disasters
• industrial pollution,
• artificial flooding in urban areas,
• nuclear radiation,
• chemical spills,
• transportation accidents,
• terrorist strikes, etc.
INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION
Industrial pollution is which can be directly linked with industry. This form of pollution is
one of the leading causes of pollution worldwide. There are a number of forms of
industrial pollution. Industrial pollution can also impact air quality, and it can enter the
soil, causing widespread environmental problems
Industrial activities are a major source of air, water, land pollution, leading to illness and
loss of life all over the world. The world health organisation (WHO) estimates that outdoor
air pollution alone accounts for around 2% of all heart & lung diseases, about 5% off all
lung cancers, and about 1% of all chest infections
Causes of Industrial pollution
Industrial growth that is unplanned
A lot of air & water pollution has occurred from companies who ignored rules or standard
practices of facilitate rapid growth.
Industrial growth has been a frequent culprit for pollution
Causes
International use of nuclear weapons in the event of war
Accidental explosion of nuclear weapons
Accidents in nuclear power projects
Terrorist attacks
International Nuclear Event Scale
The International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES) was introduced in 1990[1] by the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in order to enable prompt communication of safety
significant information in case of nuclear accidents.
The scale is intended to be logarithmic, similar to the moment magnitude scale that is used to
describe the comparative magnitude of earthquakes. Each increasing level represents an
accident approximately ten times as severe as the previous level. Compared to earthquakes,
where the
event intensity can be quantitatively evaluated,
the level of severity of a man-made disaster, such as a
nuclear
accident, is more subject to interpretation. Because
of this
subjectivity the INES level of an
incident is assigned well after the fact.
Three Mile Pennsylvania March 28, 1979 The initial cleanup effort cost nearly a accident was a partial United Level 5
Island billion dollars. nuclear meltdown States
Baneberry 1970 buried 900 feet below ground, nuclear weapons tests
Test Eighty-six workers at the site were
exposed to radiation.
TERRORISM
Source link :
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/defence/42-outfits-banned-i
n-india-for-involvement-in-terror-activities-government/articleshow/8141
1474.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_cam
paign=cppst
Terrorist organisations Source : https://www.mha.gov.in/
24 Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) -- People’s War, all its formations and front
banned by India organizations
25 Maoist Communist Centre (MCC), all its formations and Front Organisations
1 Babbar Khalsa International 26 Al Badr
2 Khalistan Commando Force 27 Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen
3 Khalistan Zindabad Force 28 Al-Qaida/Al-Qaida in Indian Sub-continent (AQIS) and all its manifestations.
4 International Sikh Youth Federation 29 Dukhtaran-E-Millat (DEM)
5 Lashkar-E-Taiba/Pasban-E-Ahle Hadis 30 Tamil Nadu Liberation Army (TNLA)
6 Jaish-E-Mohammed/Tahrik-E-Furqan 31 Tamil National Retrieval Troops (TNRT)
7 Harkat-Ul-Mujahideen or Harkat-Ul-Ansar or Harkat-Ul-Jehad-E-Islami or 32 Akhil Bharat Nepali Ekta Samaj (ABNES)
Ansar-Ul-Ummah (AUU). 33 Organisations listed in the Schedule to the U.N. Prevention and Suppression of
8 Hizb-Ul-Mujahideen/ Hizb-Ul-Mujahideen Pir Panjal Regiment Terrorism (Implementation of Security Council Resolutions) Order, 2007 made under
9 Al-Umar-Mujahideen section 2 of the United Nations (Security Council) Act, 1947 and amended from time to
10 Jammu and Kashmir Islamic Front time.
11 United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA) 34 Communist Party of India (Maoist) all its formations and front organizations.
12 National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) in Assam 35 Indian Mujahideen, all its formations and front organizations.
13 People’s Liberation Army (PLA) 36 Garo National Liberation Army (GNLA), all its formations and front organizations.
14 United National Liberation Front (UNLF) 37 Kamatapur Liberation Organisation, all its formations and front organizations.
15 People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) 38 Islamic State/Islamic State of Iraq and Levant/Islamic State of Iraq and
16 Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) Syria/Daish/Islamic State in Khorasan Province (ISKP)/ISIS Wilayat Khorasan/Islamic
17 Kanglei Yaol Kanba Lup (KYKL) State of Iraq and the Sham-Khorasan (ISIS-K) and all its manifestations.
18 Manipur People’s Liberation Front (MPLF) 39 National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Khaplang) [NSCN(K)], all its formations and front
19 All Tripura Tiger Force organisations
20 National Liberation Front of Tripura 40 Declaring khalistan Liberation Force and all its manifestations as Terrorist Organisation
21 Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) 41 Tehreek-ul-Mujahideen (TuM) and all its manifestations
22 Students Islamic Movement of India 42 Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh or Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen India or Jamaat-ul-
Mujahideen Hindustan and all its manifestations
23 Deendar Anjuman
ACCIDENTS
Causes of accidents
In most causes due to human failures and in a few rare cases these are caused by
technical failures such as failures of brakes etc, road accidents also occur under
conditions of impaired visibility, slippery road surface etc
Safety measures
Look on either side of the road before crossing
Use zebra crossing, helmet for 2 wheeler & seat belt for 4 wheelers
Rail accidents
Railways are confronted with disasters arising out of cyclone, floods, fire bomb blasts,
technical errors etc
While a railway accident can occur at any stretch of railway track experience has show that
portion of railway track having double line sections are particularly vulnerable to serious rail
accidents
Causes of accidents
Cyclones, floods, landslides
Washing away track, human failures, bomb blasts
Tampering of track, level crossings
Safety measures
Do not carry inflammable materials, avoid smoking in trains
Pay attention to signals, swing barriers, fish crossing, level crossings, signals
Air accidents
3 types of mid air collisions, forced landing, crash due to technical snags or air crash in
mountainous terrains due to poor visibility
Causes of accidents
Human failure of pilots, air traffic controllers or technical failures
Landing instruments
Safety measures
Pay attention to the flight crew safety
Keep your seatbelt fastened when seated
Avoid smoking, stay calm and listen to crew members
boat accidents
Either due to cyclone or floods or over loading of the boat or by tsunamis or poor
quality of equipment in the boat, poor maintenance and consequent breakdown
and of course human error of judgment
Causes of accidents
Lack of safety consciousness on the part of crew
Over loading, over crowding, sailing in adverse weather and collision
Safety measures
Anchorage of boats during bad weather conditions
Have safety kits for the no of people in the boat
Statistics
A total 4,37,396 road accidents were recorded across India in 2019, resulting in the death
of 1,54,732 people and injuries to another 4,39,262, according to the latest National Crime
Records Bureau (NCRB) data
Indian Railways has recorded zero passenger deaths in rail accidents in 2019, making it the
national transporter's safest year in history, according to official data. ... In 2018-19,
railways recorded 16 death, 28 deaths in 2017-2018 and 195 deaths during 2016-2017.
Accident rate per million departures of scheduled commercial flights India 2019. For every
million departures of scheduled airlines, there were 2.4 accidents witnessed
in India during 2019. ... There were no accidents in 2012; it was the safest year in the last
ten years.
In the year 2018, there were 29,696 incidences of drowning, resulting in deaths of 30,187
people. ... According to a report published by the Lancet in December 2019, there were
about 62,000 drowning deaths in India in the year 2017. This was nearly twice of all
(30,279) drowning deaths reported in ADSI 2017
Vulnerability in India