Chembarambakkam Lake, now being blamed for the City’s flooding, was once
the lifeline of South Chennai as it irrigated 168 villages in the
district while the North of Chennai benefitted from Puzhal Lake.
However, plundering of water bodies including the lake, has now led to
the uprooting of livelihoods and homes over a vast area.
“Chembarambakkam was known as Puliyur Kottam. It is one of the 24
kottams (villages) that existed even during the later Chola period in
Thondai Mandalam which had Kancheepuram as its headquarters,” J. Mohan,
an engineer by training and an expert on Thondai Mandalam said.
Adayar is the major river that carries water from Chembarambakkam to
South Chennai and innumerable oodais (canals) originating from Adayar
brought water to paddy fields. All ancient literatures of
Thondaimandalam have a reference to Chembarambakkam.
The recent floods in the Adyar river have left many residents wondering about flooding in areas that are usually not vulnerable.
The
reason is that the Chembarambakkam reservoir, which chiefly contributed
to floods in Adyar river, received the highest inflow in 100 years on
December 1, much more than the capacity fixed based on flood data of 60
years.
The reservoir’s capacity was last improved in
1996 to handle an inflow of 33,400 cubic feet per second (cusecs). This
equals to nearly 10 lakh litres per second. Sources say that the
reservoir received was more than 35,000 cusecs on the midnight of
December 1,2015
“If 35,000 cusecs were released into the
river, it would have only taken three hours for the flood. But, the
discharge was moderated to 29,400 cusecs that took six to nine hours for
the floods to flow into the river. We could not have discharged lesser
volume of water as the inflow was beyond the reservoir’s capacity to
handle,” said the official source.
Discharge is
moderated according to the inflow and the rainfall over the waterbody.
Normally, the reservoir’s levels are maintained two feet lower than the
maximum level during the rainy season. This is to accommodate stepping
up storage when the inflow is less.
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