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Flash Floods & Cloudbursts Kill 5 In Uttarkashi: Here's Why Uttarakhand Is Prone To Repeated Natural Disasters

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Uttarakhand: Uttarakhand is one of India’s most disaster-prone zones. The recent cloudburst in Uttarkashi’s Tharali village, which has left at least five people dead and dozens missing, is yet another reminder of the deadly interplay between geography, climate change, and unchecked development in the region.

Torrential rain triggered flash floods and landslides on Tuesday, August 5, sweeping away homes, hotels and part of an army camp, and cutting off rescue access to high-altitude villages.

Geographical Fragility

The heart of the problem lies in Uttarakhand’s unique geography. The state sits within the geologically young and unstable Garhwal Himalayas, where steep mountain slopes, deep valleys, and active seismic zones combine to create a naturally fragile ecosystem. Villages like Dharali and Harsil are nestled in narrow river valleys surrounded by unstable rock formations.

Here, glacier-fed rivers like the Bhagirathi, Alaknanda, Mandakini and Yamuna swell rapidly during the monsoon due to intense rainfall and glacial melt. The Bhagirathi, for instance, begins at the Gangotri glacier and winds its way through multiple towns before meeting the Alaknanda at Devprayag to form the Ganga. This natural drainage system becomes dangerous when choked by debris or accelerated by sudden cloudbursts.

The proximity of communities like Dharali (just 14 km from Gangotri) to such volatile river systems increases their exposure to flash flooding, especially during intense rainfall episodes.

Human Interference and Climate Change

While the natural terrain is risky, human activity has made matters worse. Unregulated construction of roads, dams, and buildings in ecologically sensitive zones has disrupted the natural flow of water. Deforestation and haphazard land-use changes have stripped the hillsides of vegetation, eroding soil stability and limiting rainwater absorption.

Rising global temperatures have also compounded the issue by intensifying monsoonal systems. Warmer air holds more moisture, and when this hits the steep Himalayan ranges, it rises rapidly, leading to heavy, localised downpours known as cloudbursts. Defined by rainfall of over 100 mm in under an hour, these events are sudden, destructive and increasingly frequent in Uttarakhand.

Experts also point to changes in wind patterns, low-pressure systems funnelling more moisture into the region, and anomalies in monsoon behaviour that make forecasting even harder.

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