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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

Mumbai's ₹13,000-crore flood plan: How it will become a 'Sponge City'

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis announced a Rs 13,000-crore master plan for integrated flood mitigation during the assembly session on Wednesday, incorporating traditional methods of drainage improvement along with measures based on natural elements aimed at solving the chronic flooding issue in Mumbai, particularly in the low-lying regions of the city.

According to a senior official of the BMC, the proposal has been submitted to central government officials and National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) officials who have given their in-principle approval and a detailed project report is currently being prepared after having discussions with NDMA officials.

The flood mitigation plan is on par with the Rs 13,984 crore Coastal Road project and the funding will be as follows – 40% through National Disaster Response Fund, 30% from Maharashtra government and 30% by the BMC.

Read More: Maharashtra CM Fadnavis defends Mumbai-Pune Expressway 'Missing Link' project, warns critics spreading 'lies'

The blueprint has been in the making for over a year now as the first NDMA meeting took place on March 12, 2025, and it was followed by site inspections and then a presentation by Union Home Minister Amit Shah after which in-principle clearance was obtained.

additional municipal commissioner Abhijit Bangar said, "The plan proposes a mix of engineering and ecological interventions, with exact locations to be finalised through the DPR. Key measures include upgrading storm-water drains to handle rainfall exceeding 55 mm per hour in vulnerable stretches and at locations where multiple nullahs discharge into a single drain, expanding pumping capacity in flood-prone areas such as Mahul and Mogra, and taking up the next phase of the Mithi river improvement project. Nature-based interventions include detention-infiltration tanks, bio-retention parks, sponge parks and permeable pavements to reduce surface runoff and improve groundwater recharge."

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