Abstract

Floods are recurrent events in the floodplains of Coochbehar district inundating and damaging considerable quantities of standing crops and hampering the livelihoods of thousands of peoples. This paper addresses an efficient and reliable methodology for preparing flood risk map for the Coochbehar district based on two essential concepts of hazard and vulnerability. With the aid of analytical hierarchy process, a variety of hazard and vulnerability defining criteria have been weighted according to their contributions and were further processed in the geographical information system environment to observe and assess spatial characters of flood hazard index (FHI) and flood vulnerability index (FVI) that collectively have defined the flood risk index (FRI). Accordingly, the eastern, southeastern, southern, central and north-central parts of the district are prone to frequent floods while vulnerability levels are higher at areas locating particularly along the India-Bangladesh international border in the south, southeast and southwest and in some isolated clusters in the central and north-central parts. The influences of these FHI and FVI in shaping the FRI distribution were observed to be varying at places. The Tufanganj subdivision is found to be the least safe administrative unit followed by the Coochbehar Sadar, Mathabhanga and Dinhata subdivisions. The rest, i.e., the Mekliganj subdivision is observed to be relatively safe but is not immune at all. The flood risk distribution yielded the information of 58 (4.91%) settlements with higher FRI scores followed by 145 (12.29%) villages/towns with moderate and 456 (38.64%) villages/towns under low flooding risks.

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