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With climate change a reality, sponge city concept may work

The Free Press Journal - Mumbai

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September 26, 2025

Sponge city concept is neither uniquely Chinese nor new in India, given the Indian way of life where communities learnt to live with water

- SMRUTI KOPPIKAR

When it did not stop raining even on the eve of Navratri in Mumbai, well into the third week of September, worry was writ large for many in the city.

Mumbai, like other cities, has been grappling with flood management plans, climate action plans, and suchlike for about a decade now. The thrust of these, however, has been on engineering and technological solutions to combat floods or drain the rain faster or prevent waterlogging. Water pumps are now de rigueur across the city. The municipal authorities say this approach is working because even if there's waterlogging from heavy rainfall, it drains out faster than it used to.

Dhakuria to ebb away completely. Delhi's flooding spots are, of course, legendary. So are Pune's and Bengaluru'. Every city, really. This is not only about rainfall patterns shifting in the era of climate change—more intense rainfall over shorter durations has become the norm. Cities are facing the fallout of the unsustainable building model promoted from the West and embraced across the world.

In this model, the natural ecology of the city does not matter—hills are flattened out, forests are hacked, thousands of trees are axed if they are in the way of massive construction projects, water bodies are landfilled without a second thought, river floodplains are claimed as developable land and built upon, lakes are turned into sites of construction, and coastlines and marshlands are not respected. All in the name of ‘development’. There has to be another way to build cities—or rebuild them.

The Free Press Journal - Mumbai'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

The Free Press Journal

'AI could replace 40% jobs by 2030'

Artificial intelligence could transform the global workforce sooner than expected and may replace up to 40 per cent of jobs, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has warned.

time to read

1 mins

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

Vijay lingered, and stampede happened

Police have named key functionaries of actor-turned-politic ian Vijay’s party in an FIR that asserts his delayed appearance at the venue caused chaotic crowd movements and ultimately led to the crush.

time to read

1 min

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

MOODY’S AFFIRMS INDIA’S RATINGS

Maintains ‘stable’ outlook

time to read

1 min

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

India wins but Pak steals cup

MAUKA MAUKA | India-Pakistan tensions spill onto the podium as a stand-off ended with Pak Minister Mohsin Naqvi ordering the Asia Cup off the ground

time to read

3 mins

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

₹100 fare leaves PMPML'S bus empty during trial

DOUBLE DECKER FIASCO | Commuters criticise steep charge during trial run in Pune; officials say fares yet to be finalised

time to read

1 mins

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

AC short-circuit sparks major blaze, all workers escape

A major fire broke out at an office in a business park in Thane on Monday.

time to read

1 mins

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

ISIS case: NIA court orders 8-yr RI to two

An NIA court on Monday sentenced two Coimbatore residents to eight years of Rigorous Imprisonment (RI) for recruiting and propagating ideology of global terror group, ISIS.

time to read

1 min

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

Hundreds throng eco-friendly Durga Puja in Waluj

Hundreds of devotees are attending the Durga Puja festival organised by the Bengali Association, Waluj, which began on Sep 28 at Anand Hall in Bajajnagar.

time to read

1 min

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

Govt suggests scrapping 77 minor agitation cases

Cases involving crimes against women, serious offences and personal or civil disputes cannot be pardoned under govt policy, says Ashish Shelar

time to read

1 mins

September 30, 2025

The Free Press Journal

Flood fury: State eases rules to release funds

The district planning and development funds, which currently exclude post-disaster mitigation activities, can be used according to state-approved norms

time to read

1 mins

September 30, 2025

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