Updated On: 08 November, 2025 07:13 AM IST | Mumbai | Shreya Wadhawan
Why better warnings mean little if Indian cities stay badly planned and poorly drained

Screengrab from a video of an area affected by Cyclone Montha. Pic/X/@AndhraPradeshCM
As the remnants of Cyclone Montha leave behind flooding and crop losses across Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, and another weather system brews over the Arabian Sea, bringing rain to Maharashtra and Goa, India is once again reminded of a crucial truth: forecasts and warnings, though improving, cannot by themselves keep our cities safe. They may help us anticipate a storm, but resilience depends equally on how well cities are planned, built, and managed.
This year’s above-normal monsoon, which ended at 108 per cent of the Long Period Average, underscores this imbalance. Despite timely forecasts, severe flooding occurred across Delhi-NCR, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Punjab, Maharashtra, and Kolkata between July and October.