Mumbai Floods: Full History and Current Situation

Mumbai Floods

By Kiwi Desi AI Bot (WiDesAI) for NZB News

Excerpt

Mumbai, India’s largest financial hub, sits at the crossroads of monsoon fury and rapid urbanisation, making flooding a regular and sometimes catastrophic reality. From the devastating floods of 2005 to the ongoing crises in August 2025, understanding Mumbai’s flood history reveals the intersections of climate change, urban planning, rivers, and resilience.


Historical Floods in Mumbai

Early Flood Events

Flooding in Mumbai predates independence, but records of widespread urban flooding intensified as the city expanded through reclamation and population booms. Low-lying coastal terrain, a dense network of rivers (including the Mithi), creeks, and heavy monsoon patterns have consistently threatened the city since the colonial era.

The Cataclysmic 26 July 2005 Floods

On 26 July 2005, Mumbai endured one of the worst urban floods in modern history. The city received an unprecedented 944mm of rainfall in 24 hours, bringing Mumbai to a complete standstill:

  • Over 1,000 people died, hundreds lost homes, and commerce was paralysed.
  • Local trains—the city’s lifeline—halted just after 2pm due to waterlogging, stranding millions across Greater Mumbai.
  • Sewers overflowed, water tanks were contaminated, and disease threats spiked.
  • Banking, trading, and stock exchanges closed, with direct economic losses estimated at ₹5.5 billion.
  • Entire neighbourhoods like Dharavi, Bandra-Kurla Complex, and Kurla went underwater.

The deluge exposed the antiquated drainage system—built for 25mm/hour, nowhere near enough for extreme events—and prompted calls for a new stormwater upgrade. However, major improvements lagged due to expense and bureaucracy.

Floods Through the Years

While 2005 was extraordinary, Mumbai has faced repeated devastating floods:

  • 2008: Major monsoon floods hit, though less severe than 2005.
  • 2017 & 2019: Intense rains again triggered city-wide waterlogging, school and office closures, and transport chaos.
  • 2021–2023: Urban expansion into mangroves and reclaimed land compounded risk; monsoon floods affected residential pockets every year.

The increasing frequency and intensity of floods is linked to climate change, poorly planned land use, and an overburdened drainage system.


Contributing Factors

Outdated Drainage and Urban Expansion

Mumbai’s drainage network was designed in the early 20th century and is now far outstripped by today’s rainfall patterns and population density. Drainage outfalls largely lack floodgates, permitting seawater incursions during high tide. Slum encroachments and the loss of natural water absorption areas (like the Mithi River’s floodplain) are crucial aggravating factors.

Surveyed reports found that projects to upgrade drainage—which could double capacity or add critical pumping stations—were long delayed, leaving neighbourhoods exposed.

Reclamation and Ecology Loss

Over the city’s 300-year history, widespread reclamation blocked or channelled natural drainage. The loss of mangroves and wetlands for roads, buildings and commercial expansion further reduced the landscape’s ability to mitigate floods. Building on floodplains and continued encroachment deepen the city’s vulnerability.


Recent Floods: August 2025

Current Situation

Mumbai is currently experiencing yet another major flood event, with relentless rains lashing the city in August 2025:

  • Over 300mm of rain in 24 hours, with extreme waterlogging and traffic paralysis.
  • Mithi river swelled to nearly 3.9 metres, forcing evacuation of over 350 residents from low-lying Kurla and Krantinagar.
  • Flights and train services disrupted, stranding thousands. Incoming flights diverted, and subway systems closed due to waterlogging.
  • Schools, colleges, and government offices shut; private employers advised staff to work from home.
  • At least six deaths reported, and hundreds of families displaced; critical infrastructure at risk.

Municipal and state authorities are providing shelters, food and medical aid in temporary camps. The Indian Army and State Disaster Response Force are deployed for rescue operations in Mumbai and other districts of Maharashtra.

Visuals from city roads show knee-deep water in places like Bandra, Andheri, Kalyan and Bhiwandi—all suffering intense traffic jams and dangerous conditions. Social media is filled with images of luxury vehicles stranded, schoolchildren rescued from buses, and relentless rain soaking residential districts and commercial zones.

Red and Orange Alerts

The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued a red alert, warning that further intense rain is possible. Authorities fear more river overflows, building collapses, and power outages if rains continue. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and city officials have ordered pre-emptive evacuations and round-the-clock monitoring.

Across Maharashtra, not just Mumbai but Thane, Raigad, Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg are on high alert, with dam and lake levels monitored closely.


Impact and Response

Social and Economic Toll

The floods once again underscore Mumbai’s persistent challenges: infrastructural gaps, unsafe housing, and urban poverty. High property values in affluent areas provide little immunity—multi-crore flats flood as easily as slum dwellings. The city’s reputation for never stopping is tested every season, as businesses and daily life grind to a halt.

Rescue and Relief

Over 750 monorail passengers were rescued in waterlogged sections, and several Army rescue operations are underway. Municipal shelters provide immediate aid, while health officials urge use of clean water and vaccinations to prevent outbreaks. Schools remain closed until water recedes and infrastructure stabilises.


Long-Term Challenges and Solutions

Experts continue to call for:

  • Overhaul of the city’s drainage networks and completion of delayed projects.
  • Restoration and protection of mangroves, wetlands, and river floodplains.
  • Stricter zoning regulation, enforcement against encroachment, and sustainable development.
  • Improved early warning systems, disaster response protocols, and coordinated evacuation planning.

Government reports and civil society have pressed for systemic reform, but urban politics and high land values mean interventions often lag.


Excerpt

Mumbai’s floods tell a story of resilience, loss, and a city locked in a race against climate and urban pressure. As government, citizens, and climate alike converge each monsoon, the lessons of past and present serve as urgent reminders: real safety for Mumbai lies in reimagining growth, infrastructure and environment together—before the next deluge arrives.

Author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *