Abstract

Abstract: This study really takes a look at the perplexing connection between precipitation, temperature, and the effect of floods in Myanmar, zeroing in on how these natural elements impact the quantity of individual people impacted by flood catastrophes. Through an itemized investigation of climate information and flood influence reports from different districts, we find that high precipitation levels don't be guaranteed to correspond with expanded flood harm. A few locales experience serious flooding in spite of having lower precipitation, showing that variables past precipitation, for example, geography and soil conditions, assume a huge part in flood weakness. This exploration features the requirement for complete appraisals of these ecological variables in regions encountering destroying floods, implying that districts with lower precipitation yet critical flood effects ought to go through careful topological assessments to all the more likely illuminate flood risk the executives techniques.

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