4.6 Article

Inclusion of groundwater and socio-economic factors for assessing comprehensive drought vulnerability over Narmada River Basin, India: A geospatial approach

Journal

APPLIED WATER SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s13201-021-01529-8

Keywords

Drought; Vulnerability; Groundwater; CDVI; Narmada River Basin

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This study assesses the overall drought vulnerability over the Narmada River Basin in India by incorporating hydroclimatic, socio-economic, and physiographic information. The results show that a majority of the area is highly to extremely vulnerable to droughts, highlighting the need for immediate attention and resilience-building measures. The proposed multi-dimensional approach can help policymakers proactively plan and manage water resources to mitigate the impacts of droughts.
Drought is amongst the most precarious natural hazards associated with severe repercussions. The characterization of droughts is usually carried out by the sector-specific (meteorological/agricultural/hydrological) indices that are mostly based on hydroclimatic variables. Groundwater is the major source of water supply during drought periods, and the socio-economic factors control the aftermaths of droughts; however, they are often ignored by the sector-specific indices, thereby failing to capture the overall impacts of droughts. This study aims to circumvent this issue by incorporating hydroclimatic, socio-economic and physiographic information to assess the overall drought vulnerability over Narmada River Basin, India, which is an agriculture-dominated basin highly dependent on groundwater resources. A Comprehensive Drought Vulnerability Indicator (CDVI) is proposed that assimilates the information on meteorological fluctuations, depth to groundwater level, slope, distance from river reach, population density, land use/land cover, soil type, and elevation through a geospatial approach. The CDVI showed a remarkable geospatial variation over the basin, with a majority (66.4%) of the area under highly to extremely vulnerable conditions. Out of 35 constituent districts of the basin, 9, 22, and 4 districts exhibited moderate, high, and extreme vulnerability to droughts, respectively. These results urge an immediate attention towards reducing drought vulnerability and enhancing resilience towards drought occurrences. The proposed multi-dimensional approach for drought vulnerability mapping would certainly help policy-makers to proactively plan and manage water resources over the basin, especially to ameliorate the pernicious impacts of droughts.

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