Geography, asked by samarvirk8789, 1 year ago

Give me a short note on Kerala floods in 2018

Answers

Answered by shamanthakreddy
1

                              Kerala Floods Calamity 2018

Kerela is one of the most beautiful places in the world.Every year thousands of tourists from all over the world come to Kerela to visit the most beautiful places in Kerela.The Banana chips of Kerela are famous all over the world and som people specially visit Kerela to but the handmade chocletes and Banana chips of Kerela.


But in the month of August severe rain has cost floods in Kerela.So many people have lost their lives,their families and property in this flood.The 2018 floods were the biggest floods in the history of Kerela.There has never been this bad situation in Kerela.The water level was so high that you can only see the fourth floor of the buildings.After the floods the buildings and houses need renovation because the building structures have. become weak now.


The Northern states of India have donated a lots of money for the State to recover.The floods have swept away the roads.Slowly when the rain stopped the water level also reduced and now people are getiing back to life.But it would take some time for Kerela to return back to its form.But it is really appriciable that people of Kerela started to clean their homes and surroundings as soon as they were back to home.Even when the poeple were in Shelter homes,they kept the place very clean.As soon as they were about to leave the shelter home,they clean all the area where they were living.


Kerela has always been known for its cleanliness.No other hill station is as clean as Kerela's Munnar hill station.There are various backwaters and boating places like Allapey and thekdi.We hope that the life gets normal very soon in Kerela.



Answered by Aabha2005
0
As flood-hit Kerala struggles to restore its civic infrastructure, the reconstruction of the damaged road network poses a major challenge. The state faces the task of rebuilding 10,000 km of damaged roads under the state public works department even as it faces an acute shortage of raw materials. The state will also have to support construction of at least 1 lakh houses damaged in the flood, further increasing the appetite for stone mining.

The unexpected need for huge mining comes at a time the state’s booming construction sector has been under strain since June, after the government ordered closure of stone quarrying units in ecologically fragile, landslide-prone areas in the Western Ghats. Also hit by the ban on mining is construction of 4.3 lakh houses for the homeless people in the state, slated to be completed in the next three years.
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