This MCQ module is based on: Cyclones, Landslides & Disaster Management
Cyclones, Landslides & Disaster Management
This assessment will be based on: Cyclones, Landslides & Disaster Management
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Chapter 6 · Tropical Cyclones, Landslides & Disaster Management
Have you noticed how the names of cyclones — Phailin, Hudhud, Vardah, Fani, Amphan — sound almost poetic in news headlines, even as the storms themselves devastate fishing villages and crops? Or watched grim footage of Kedarnath being swept away in 2013 by a single landslide-and-flash-flood disaster? Why do storms born in the Bay of Bengal hit harder than those born in the Arabian Sea? And how does India, in 2026, organise itself to respond when the earth shakes, the rivers rage, or the wind howls? This part walks through the science of cyclones, the geology of landslides, and the framework of disaster management in India.
6.8 Tropical Cyclones
Tropical cyclones? are intense low-pressure systems confined to the area lying between 30° N and 30° S latitudes, around which high-velocity winds blow in a circular pattern. Horizontally, a mature tropical cyclone extends 500–1,000 km; vertically, it stretches from the surface up to 12–14 km. The system is, in effect, a giant heat engine — energised by the latent heat released as moisture condenses inside the rising air column over warm seas.
6.8.1 Conditions for Cyclone Formation
Scientists do not yet fully agree on the exact mechanism of a tropical cyclone, but four initial conditions must be present:
6.8.2 Anatomy of a Tropical Cyclone
A mature tropical cyclone has three diagnostic features — the calm eye, the violent eye-wall, and the broad spiral rain-bands. Inside the eye, descending air keeps the sky clear and the wind almost still. Surrounding it, the eye-wall holds the strongest winds and the heaviest rain on Earth. Beyond, the spiral bands of cloud feed moisture into the system from the warm sea below.
Figure 6.E: Anatomy of a tropical cyclone — the calm eye, the violent eye-wall, and the spiralling rain-bands. Latent heat released by condensation drives the engine; high-altitude outflow keeps the system going.
6.8.3 Spatio-Temporal Distribution in India
India's peninsular shape is flanked by the Bay of Bengal in the east and the Arabian Sea in the west — both warm tropical seas in which cyclones can form. Most Indian cyclones originate between 10°–15° N latitudes during the monsoon season. In the Bay of Bengal, cyclones develop most often during October and November; they originate between 16°–21° N and west of 92° E. By July, the place of origin shifts to around 18° N and west of 90° E, near the Sundarban delta.
| Year | Cyclone | Origin | Landfall & Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Odisha “Super Cyclone” | Bay of Bengal | Paradip, Odisha; ~10,000 deaths; massive storm surge |
| 2013 | Phailin | Bay of Bengal | Gopalpur, Odisha; effective evacuation saved many lives |
| 2014 | Hudhud | Bay of Bengal | Visakhapatnam, AP; sustained winds ~ 185 km/h |
| 2016 | Vardah | Bay of Bengal | Chennai, Tamil Nadu |
| 2019 | Fani | Bay of Bengal | Puri, Odisha; one of the strongest pre-monsoon storms |
| 2020 | Amphan | Bay of Bengal | Sundarbans / West Bengal; Super Cyclonic Storm category |
Figure 6.F: Approximate frequency of cyclones recorded over the Bay of Bengal versus the Arabian Sea over recent decades — the eastern basin clearly dominates.
6.8.4 Consequences of Tropical Cyclones
The energy of a tropical cyclone comes entirely from the latent heat released by warm, moist air. As distance from the sea increases, the cyclone loses fuel and weakens. In India, therefore, the force of the cyclone falls rapidly with distance from the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea. The coastal areas, however, are often struck by severe cyclonic storms with average velocities of 180 km/h. Often this leads to an abnormal rise in sea level called a storm surge?.
A storm surge is generated by the interaction of air, sea and land. The cyclone provides the driving force in the form of a very high horizontal pressure gradient and very strong surface winds. Sea water flows across the coast along with strong winds and heavy downpours, inundating human settlements and agricultural fields, damaging crops, and destroying built structures. Loss of life is amplified because India's coast is densely populated and central to the national economy.
6.9 Landslides
Have you ever read of the road to Srinagar being blocked by falling boulders, or of trains stopped on the Konkan Railway by debris on the tracks? These are landslides? — the rapid sliding of large masses of bedrock down a slope. Although less dramatic than earthquakes or cyclones, their cumulative impact on the natural environment and the national economy is no smaller.
Unlike most other disasters, landslides are largely controlled by highly localised factors — geology, geomorphic agents, slope, land use, vegetation cover, and human activities. This makes monitoring difficult and cost-intensive: each potential landslide site must be assessed individually rather than predicted from regional patterns.
6.9.1 Landslide Vulnerability Zones of India
| Zone | Areas Covered |
|---|---|
| Very High Vulnerability | Highly unstable, relatively young mountainous areas in the Himalayas and the Andaman & Nicobar Islands; high-rainfall regions with steep slopes in the Western Ghats and the Nilgiris; the north-eastern regions; areas of frequent ground-shaking due to earthquakes; and zones of intense human activity related to construction of roads, dams, etc. |
| High Vulnerability | Areas with similar conditions to the very-high zone, differing only in combination, intensity and frequency of factors. All Himalayan states and all north-eastern states (except the plains of Assam) fall here. |
| Moderate to Low Vulnerability | Less-precipitation areas of trans-Himalayan Ladakh and Spiti (Himachal Pradesh); undulated yet stable areas of the Aravali; rain-shadow areas in Western and Eastern Ghats and the Deccan plateau. Mining-induced landslides and subsidence are common in Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, MP, Maharashtra, AP, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Goa and Kerala. |
| Other / Safe Areas | Rajasthan, Haryana, UP, Bihar, West Bengal (except Darjiling), Assam (except Karbi Anglong) and the southern coastal States. |
6.9.2 Consequences of Landslides
Landslides have a relatively small and localised area of direct impact, but their consequences are far-reaching. Roads are blocked, railway lines destroyed, and river channels dammed by rock-falls. Diversion of river courses by landslide dams can cause downstream floods and loss of life and property. Spatial interaction becomes risky and costly — tourism, defence supplies and ordinary economic activity all suffer.
6.9.3 Mitigation
The right approach to landslides is always area-specific. NCERT recommends a mix of restrictive and constructive measures:
- Restrict construction and developmental activities — especially roads and dams — in the high-vulnerability zones.
- Limit agriculture to valleys and areas with moderate slopes.
- Control the development of large settlements in vulnerable zones.
- Promote large-scale afforestation programmes; build bunds to reduce the flow of water down slopes.
- Encourage terrace farming in the north-eastern hill states where jhumming (slash-and-burn / shifting cultivation) is still prevalent.
- List three factors that make landslide prediction harder than earthquake prediction at the regional scale.
- Suggest two ways in which a hill village in Uttarakhand can prepare for a landslide season every monsoon.
- Why is jhumming discouraged in the north-eastern hill states from a landslide-mitigation perspective?
Pointers: (1) Localised geology, slope angles vary metre by metre, vegetation cover changes after every monsoon, human activity is highly variable. (2) Pre-monsoon village survey of slope cracks, alarm system tied to local rain gauges, identification of evacuation routes. (3) Slash-and-burn removes deep-rooted vegetation that holds soil; the next heavy rain can wash a hillside down in minutes.
6.10 Disaster Management
Some disasters are more predictable than others. Cyclones, unlike earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions, are largely predictable in time and place — modern satellite-based monitoring of the cyclone's intensity, direction and magnitude has made cyclonic-hazard management possible to a fair extent. Cyclone shelters, embankments, dykes, reservoirs and afforestation to break the wind speed are some of the steps that minimise damage. Yet losses keep rising because of the high vulnerability of dense coastal populations in countries like India, Bangladesh and Myanmar.
6.10.1 The Disaster Management Bill, 2005
The Act laid the institutional foundation for India's modern disaster-management framework. Two anchors stand out:
- NDMA — the National Disaster Management Authority, chaired by the Prime Minister, which lays down policies and guidelines for disaster management at the national level.
- NDRF — the National Disaster Response Force, the multi-disciplinary specialist force trained for search, rescue and relief at the time of a disaster. State and District Disaster Management Authorities (SDMA, DDMA) extend the same architecture downward.
6.10.2 Three Stages of Disaster Mitigation and Management
NCERT identifies three stages in the disaster-management cycle:
| Stage | Activities |
|---|---|
| (i) Pre-disaster Management | Generation of data and information about disasters; preparation of vulnerability zoning maps; spreading public awareness; disaster planning, preparedness and preventive measures in vulnerable areas. |
| (ii) During Disaster | Rescue and relief operations — evacuation; construction of shelters and relief camps; emergency supply of water, food, clothing and medical aid. |
| (iii) Post-disaster | Rehabilitation and recovery of victims; capacity-building so that the affected community can cope with future disasters. |
Figure 6.G: The disaster management cycle — mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery rotate around every disaster event. Pre-disaster, during disaster, and post-disaster phases together form a continuous loop.
India needs this framework with special urgency: about two-thirds of its geographical area, and an equal proportion of its population, are vulnerable to one disaster or another. The introduction of the Disaster Management Act, 2005 and the establishment of the National Institute of Disaster Management are concrete steps in this direction.
6.10.3 Conclusion — Hazards Need Not Become Disasters
Disasters can be either natural or the result of human activities, and not every hazard turns into a disaster. Since natural disasters are difficult to eliminate, the next best option is mitigation and preparedness. The three pillars — vulnerability mapping, public awareness, and a trained response force — transform hazards from helpless tragedies into manageable risks. The story of India's disaster management is, in the end, a story of humans learning to share the planet with its tantrums.
- On an outline map of India, shade three colours: cyclone-vulnerable east coast (Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal), cyclone-vulnerable west coast (Gujarat, Maharashtra), and the very-high landslide zone (Himalayas, NE India, Western Ghats).
- Mark Phailin (2013, Gopalpur), Hudhud (2014, Visakhapatnam), Fani (2019, Puri) and Amphan (2020, Sundarbans) as labelled landfall points.
- Mark Malpa (1998) and Kedarnath (2013) as starred landslide events.
Pointers: Cyclone-vulnerable east coast forms a wide arc from West Bengal through Odisha, AP and Tamil Nadu — all four major recent storms made landfall there. The west coast (Gujarat, Maharashtra) faces fewer but increasingly intense Arabian-Sea storms. The Himalayan and NE landslide belt extends in a narrow ribbon along the Himalayan arc; the Western Ghats and Nilgiris carry similar risk. Malpa is in Pithoragarh district (Uttarakhand); Kedarnath is in Rudraprayag district.
Competency-Based Questions — Cyclones, Landslides & Disaster Management
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.