Living with the River: Going with the Flow of the Kosi - SAR-CLIMATE

Living with the River: Going with the Flow of the Kosi

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During the flooding season, boats become the only means of transport in the Kosi River Basin in places within the embankments. (Photo: Manoj Kumar Singh / Gorakhpur News Line)

Living with the River: Going with the Flow of the Kosi

There is a growing need for citizen-centered approaches to water governance and transboundary cooperation.

The Kosi Basin illustrates the interconnected effects of climate change and man-made interventions on lives and ecosystems in a transboundary basin.

Floods impact agricultural production as fields remain submerged for months. Growing population density, urbanization, and encroachment on watersheds put additional pressure on the basin’s freshwater ecosystems.

Water disasters in the basin, triggered or amplified by poorly planned infrastructure, strike communities without regard to international borders.

In 2008, the Kosi breached the man-made embankments that had been built to control and contain it, with grave consequences for 2.64 million people in India and Nepal, taking lives and destroying livelihoods on both sides of the border.

The floods deposited sand and silt on arable lands that left them unfit for cultivation for years. In Nepal, 4,648 hectares of agricultural land were ruined.

In Bihar, India’s most flood-prone state, the 2008 floods damaged 100,000 hectares of wheat and rice farmland and the livelihoods of around 500,000 farmers.

Communities living along the basin are among the most economically disadvantaged, the most vulnerable to natural disasters, and the least able to adapt and respond to rapid ecosystem degradation.

In India, the Kosi flows through one of the poorest states, Bihar, where a majority of the rural population is dependent on agriculture. In Nepal, 40 percent of the population in the basin lives below the poverty line.

While high-profile hydropower projects in the basin have been a development priority, they are yet to improve livelihoods or other socio-economic benefits in the basin, including electricity access.

These socio-economic inequities were echoed in a series of multi-stakeholder dialogues in the basin, organized by community-based NGOs and organizations supported by The Asia Foundation, in which the communities described the challenges they face in the Kosi River Basin.

Development issues persist across the board, from lack of a minimum wage or access to land to inadequate healthcare, sanitation, and education.

Male migration from the region has increased in the last decade. Women are particularly affected by the lack of sanitation and freshwater for domestic care work.

Silt deposition near an embankment at Navbhata, Saharasa, Bihar, India, in the Kosi River Basin (Photo: CC BY 3.0 via Wikipedia)

Multi-stakeholder dialogue on the experience of inundation and flooding in the Kosi River Basin conducted by Gorakhpur Environmental Action Group (Photo: Malavika Thirukode / The Asia Foundation)

Malavika Thirukode is a Program Officer and Manvi Tripathi is a former Intern with the Asia Foundation’s India-U.S. Triangular Development Partnership (TriDeP).

Malavika can be reached at: malavika.thirukode@asiafoundation.org

The views and opinions expressed here are those of the authors, not those of The Asia Foundation.

This piece was previously published on The Asia Foundation’s InAsia blog on March 16, 2022.

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