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SUBMITTED
TO:MRS.SHIVANGI
PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT FOR
DISASTERS
TSUNAMI
Group IV
C.CHERISHMA(10011BA006)
P.L.PRASANNA(10011BA015)
B.PRAMOD KUMAR(10011BA025)
SHYAM SUNDHAR(10011BA033)
BHANUPRAKASH(09011BA006)
M.PUSHPALATHA(08011BA019)
6/17/2013
OVER VIEW
 WHAT IS TSUNAMI & CAUSE OF TSUNAMI
 CHARACTERISTICS OF A TSUNAMI.
 IMPACTS OF TSUNAMI
 MAJOR TSUNAMIS IN WORLD & IN INDIA
 AREAS EFFECTED & IMPACT OF TSUNAMI 2004 IN INDIA
 LOCAL BODIES AND AGENCIES RESPONSE AND RECOVERY &
RECONSTRUCTION ASSISTANCE
 POLICIES IN INDIA
 DISASTER MANAGEMENT
 CASE STUDY
6/17/20132
 DEFINITION: A TSUNAMI is a series of water waves caused by the
displacement of a large volume of a body of water, typically an ocean or a large
lake.
 GENERATION MECHANISM (CAUSE) OFTSUNAMI.
• The principal generation mechanism (or cause) of a tsunami is the displacement of a
substantial volume of water or perturbation of the sea.
 SEISMICITY
 LANDSLIDES.
 METEOTSUNAMI
6/17/20133
 Travel at speeds of up to 400-500 miles per hour
 In deep waters, tsunamis are low and wide, often less than three feet high
 As much as 95 miles between the crest of one wave and the next.
 Can reach up to heights of 100 feet or more and crash inland.
 When the wave enters shallow water, it slows down and its amplitude (height) increases.
 While everyday wind waves have a wavelength (from crest to crest) of about 100 metres
(330 ft) and a height of roughly 2 metres (6.6 ft), a tsunami in the deep ocean has a
wavelength of about 200 kilometres (120 mi).
6/17/20134
CHARACTERISTICS OF A TSUNAMI.
IMPACTS OF TSUNAMI
 HUMANITARIAN: It has been reported that severe
damage has been inflicted on ecosystems such
as mangroves, coral reefs, forests, coastal wetlands,
vegetation, sand dunes and rock formations, animal and
plant biodiversity and groundwater.
 ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT: It has been reported
that severe damage has been inflicted on ecosystems such
as mangroves, coral reefs, forests, coastal wetlands,
vegetation, sand dunes and rock formations, animal and
plant biodiversity and groundwater.
 ECONOMICAL IMPACT: The two main occupations
affected by the tsunami were fishing and tourism. The
impact on coastal fishing communities and the people living
there, some of the poorest in the region
6/17/20135
6/17/20136
LIVES LOST IN SOME MAJOR TSUNAMIS
6/17/2013
7
8
LIST OF TSUNAMIS THAT AFFECTED INDIA
TSUNAMI 2004 IN INDIA
 The earthquake and resulting tsunami in the Indian Ocean
on December 26th, 2004 had a devastating effect on India.
According to the Indian government, almost 11,000 people
died in the tsunami and over 5,000 are missing and feared
dead (Ministry of Home Affairs).
 Along India's southeastern coast, several villages were
swept away, and thousands of fishermen at sea were
missing.
 India' mainland, hardest hit was the state of Tamil Nadu.
The southern peninsular region comprising Kerala and part
of Tamil Nadu on the west coast and the rest of Tamil
Nadu.
 The 9.0 magnitude (for 5 minutes) quake created a series
of tsunamis that caused great destruction and loss of life
throughout the Indian Ocean basin, within several hours of
the initial event.
6/17/20139
AREAS EFFECTED BY TSUNAMI 2004 IN INDIA
 ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS:The tsunami hit hard the Andaman and
Nicobar group which comprises of a total of 572 islands of which 38 were significantly
inhabited.The waves literally washed away some of these islands.
 KERALA:The tsunami killed many people (official toll 168) and caused extensive
destruction particularly at Kollam (131 dead), Alappuzha (32) and Ernakulam (5) were also
affected.
 PONDICHERRY:In the Union territory of Pondicherry, the affected districts were
Pondicherry (107 dead), Karaikal (453 dead). The latest official toll was 560. An estimated
30,000 people were rendered homeless .
 TAMIL NADU:The overall death toll in the state was 7,793. The Nagapattinam district had
5,525 casualties. The latest reported death toll at Velankanni was 1,500. Kanyakumari district
has had 808 deaths, Cuddalore district 599, the state capital Chennai 206 and Kancheepuram
district 124.
 ANDHRA PRADESH:There was significant loss of life and destruction. The affected
districts were Krishna, Prakasam, Nellore, Guntur, West Godavari and East Godavari.
6/17/201310
SOURCE:map of india.com
6/17/201311
DETAILS OF IMPACT OF THE TSUNAMIS OF 26TH DECEMBER, 2004 -
ON THE MAIN LAND ST ATES
Details Andhra Pradesh Kerala Tamil Nadu Pondicherry Total
Coastal length
affected in km
985 250 1000 25 2260
Percentage of
water into main
land
0.50-2.0 1-2 1-1.5 0.30-3.0 -
Average height
of the tidal wave
5 Mtrs 3-5 Mtrs 7-10 Mtrs 10 Mtrs -
No. of villages
affected
301 187 373 33 894
Population
affected(in lakh)
2.11 24.70 8.85 0.43 36.09
Dwelling units 1557 17381 124227 10061 153226
Cattle lost 195 NR 5477 506 6178
Cropped area
(Ha)
790 NR 2589 792 4171
 Tsunami impact is more on tamil nadu state when compared to
other states.
6/17/201312
LOCAL BODIES AND AGENCIES ARE SEEKING
PUBLIC HELPAND CONTRIBUTIONS
 Indian Prime Minister's National Relief Fund
 The Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has issued an appeal for contributions.
 International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies donation
 International Committee of the Red Cross donation page
 The Hindu Relief Fund
 Tamil Nadu Chief Minister's Public Relief Fund
 NDTV's trust fund
 A listing of News and information about resources, aid, donations and volunteer efforts by
a volunteer team of bloggers. Fresh information can be posted here.
 A blog of India-related relief efforts
 Volunteers for India Development and Empowerment requests on-line donations to provide
for immediate relief to disaster victims
 Site run by the South Indian Federation of Fishermen Societies (SIFFS)
6/17/201313
RESPONSE AND RECOVERY
Ex Gratia
S .no Government Ex Gratia
1 Government of India *The prime minister has announced an ex-gratia payment of
RS.100000 to the next of kin of each deceased.
*The ex-gratia payment will be made from the prime
minister’s national relief fund.
2 State Government of Tamil Nadu The chief minister has announced an ex-gratia payment of
RS.100000 to the families of each of the victims.
3 State Government of kerala Ex-gratia of RS.50000 to the next kin of those killed.
Assistance of RS.10000 for the families of the deceased, to
meet the funeral expenses.
4 Union territory of pondicherry *The chief minister N Rangasamy has announced an ex gratia
of RS.100000 to the next of kin of the dead.
*The administration would also pay an ex gratia of RS.5000
towards funeral expenditure.
*For those injured in the disaster, the administration would
provide RS.5000.
*A sum of RS.10000 to enable the homeless to reconstruct
houses.
RECONSTRUCTION ASSISTANCE BY AGENCY / INSTITUTION
AGENCY /
INSTITUTION
ANDHRA PRADESH KERELA TAMIL NADU PONDI CHERRY
Government Housing and boats Land acquisition, housing, boats
NGOs Housing Housing and boats Housing
ADB Reconstruction of
ports, rural and
municipal
infrastructure (except
rural water supply),
roads, micro
enterprises
Reconstruction of ports,
rural and municipal
infrastructure, micro -
enterprise
UN Hazard risk management, health services and primary education
IFAD Livelihood
rehabilitation in affected
coastal fisheries
World Bank Revitalizing affected
fisheries and micro –
enterprises,
reconstruction of rural
& municipal
infrastructure
Rural Water Supply Reconstruction of
housing, public
buildings and highways,
and limited support in
restoration of
agriculture, horticulture,
animal husbandry and
fisheries infrastructure
Reconstruction of
housing, fisheries
infrastructure and
restoration of
agriculture
POLICIES IN INDIA
NATIONAL POLICY ON DISASTER MANAGEMENT (NPDM)
 The National Policy on Disaster Management (NPDM) has been prepared in tune with
and in pursuance of the Disaster Management Act, 2005 with a vision to build a safe and
disaster resilient India by developing a holistic, proactive, multi-disaster oriented and
technology driven strategy through a culture of prevention, mitigation, preparedness and
response.
 The NPDM aims to bring in transparency and accountability in all aspects of disaster
management through involvement of community, community based
organizations, Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), local bodies and civil society.
THE DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACT, 2005
 The Act provides for the legal and institutional framework for the effective management
of disasters.
 The Act mandates creation of new institutions and assignment of specific roles for
Central, State and Local Governments.
 Under the provisions of the Act, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA)
has been established under the Chairmanship of the Prime Minister and National
Executive Committee (NEC) of Secretaries has been created to assist the NDMA in the
performance of its functions
6/17/201316
DISASTER MANAGEMENT FOR TSUNAMI IN INDIA
DISASTER:A disaster is any event, natural or man-caused, which creates an intense
negative impact on people, goods and services, and/or the environment, and exceeds the
affected community’s internal capability to respond, prompting the need to seek outside
assistance.
DISASTER MANAGEMENT :it can be defined as the organization and management of
resources and responsibilities for dealing with all humanitarian aspects of emergencies, in
particular preparedness, response and recovery in order to lessen the impact of disasters.
 THE COMPRHENESIVE DISASTER MANAGEMENT
(CDM) CYCLE
6/17/201317
DIASTER MANAGEMENT CYCLE
6/17/201318
ORGANISATIONS INVOLVED
 PREVENTION Research Institutions (Sponsored Research)
Ministry of Earth Science (IMD, DOD, DST)
Ministry of Water Resources
Ministry of Agriculture
 MITIGATION Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA, MUD, MoEF and
other related ministries and departments)
State Govt. (Various Departments)
District/Local Administration and NGO’s
 PREPAREDNESS Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA, MUD, MoEF)
State Govt.
District/Local Administration and NGO’s
DIASTER MANAGEMENT CYCLE
6/17/201319
ORGANISATIONS INVOLVED
 RESPONSE Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA)
State Govt.
District/Local Administration and NGO’s
 RELIEF Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA)
State Govt.
District/Local Administration and NGO’s
 REHABILITATION Central Govt. (Integrated efforts of
various ministries and departments)
State Govt.
District/Local Administration and NGO’s
 RECONSTRUCTION Central Govt. (Integrated efforts of
various ministries and departments)
State Govt.
District/Local Administration and NGO’s
 LONG TERM RECOVERY Central, State, Local Govt. and NGO’s
 MITIGATION: During the mitigation phase structural and non-structural
measures are undertaken to limit the adverse impact of natural hazards, environmental
degradation and technological hazards.
STRUCTURAL MITIGATION MEASURES
 Permanent structures strictly according to BIS codes
 Retrofitting of vulnerable structures for tsunami/cyclone resistance
 Retrofitting of important buildings
I. Fire stations / police stations/ army structures/ hospitals
II. VIP residences / offices/ railways, airport, etc.
III. Schools/colleges
IV. Hazardous industries
V. Other critical structures (i.e. power stations, warehouses, oil and
other storage tanks etc)
6/17/201320
MITIGATION MEASURES
MITIGATION MEASURES
6/17/201321
NON-STRUCTURAL MITIGATION MEASURES
 Education
 Public Awareness
 Information
 Risk Communication
 Training to all concerned
(Govt. officials, search and rescue
workers, volunteers, women, children, elderly, local community as a whole)
 Coastal regulations Zone Act – Strict implementation (no
development within 500 m of the high tide line with elevation of less than 10 m
above m.s.l)
 Land use Zoning in accordance with CRZ
MITIGATION MEASURES
6/17/201322
 Natural Bioshields (Mangroves) and shelterbelt plantations (Casuarina)
 Maintaining Natural Sand dunes
 Maintaining and promoting beach development
PREPAREDNESS
6/17/201323
 PREPAREDNESS: Preparedness activities are geared towards minimizing
disaster damage, enhancing disaster response operations and preparing organizations and
individuals to respond. They also involve planning, organizing, training, interaction with
other organizations and related agencies, resource inventory, allocation and
placement, and plan testing.
 TSUNAMI PREPAREDNESS FOR FAR-FIELD AND LOCAL TSUNAMIS
 MEDICAL PREPAREDNESS.
RESPONSE
 RESPONSE: Actions carried out in a disaster situation with the objective to save
life, alleviate suffering and reduce economic losses.
 Emergency Tsunami Response.
 Emergency Search and Rescue.
 Emergency Relief.
 Incident Response System.
 Community-Based Disaster Response.
RESPONSE
6/17/201324
 Involvement of Corporate Sector.
 Improving Tsunami Response.
 Emergency Medical Response.
 RECOVERY:
 In the recovery phase, also referred to as the
recovery and rehabilitation phase, activities are
geared towards the restoration of basic services and
the beginning of the repair of physical, social and
economic damage e.g. lifelines, health and
communication facilities, as well as utility systems.
SPECIFIC MEASURES FOR SAFETY FROM
TSUNAMIS
EFFECT DESIGN SOLUTION
Hydrodynamic forces (pushing forces on the
front face building and drag caused by flow
around the building
 elevate building to avoid
 design for dynamic water forces on walls
&building elements.
 anchor building to foundation.
Debris impact  elevate building to avoid
 design for impact loads
scour  use deeper foundation.
 protect against scour and erosion around
foundation
6/17/201325
SPECIFIC DESIGN PRINCIPLES FOR TSUNAMI
 Know the Tsunami Risk at the site.
 Avoid new developments in Tsunami Run-up Areas
 Site Planning Strategies to reduce Tsunami Risk
 Tsunami Resistant Buildings – New Developments
 Protection of existing buildings and infrastructure – Assessment,
Retrofit, Protection measures.
 Special Precautions in locating and designing infrastructure and
critical facilities
 Planning for Evacuation
6/17/201326
TAMIL NADU
6/17/201327
YEAR 2004 TSUNAMI AND THE TAMIL NADU
COAST OF INDIA
 Around 13 coastal districts were affected by the tsunami in the state of Tamil
Nadu. Most, severely were affected Nagapattinam, Cuddalore, Chennai,
Kancheepuram and Kanakumari districts (Govt. of Tamil Nadu, 2005).
 Many casualties were detected in 80 places where pilgrims and tourists flock,
such as Velankanni and Kanyakumari, at the southern tip of India, and on
Marina Beach in Chennai .
 The damage to the fishing community who inhabit the land closest to the these
fishing communities face the long-term consequences of lost homes, destroyed
village infrastructure and total loss of livelihood when boats and fishing
equipment were lost.
6/17/201328
AREAS AFFECTED IN TAMIL NADU COAST
6/17/2013
AREAS AFFECTED IN TAMIL NADU COAST
 The places covered in the map of Tamil Nadu are
Coimbatore, Udagamangalam, Nilgiris, Erode, Namakkal, Ariyalur, Nagappattinam, C
uddalore
Pondicherry,Viluppuram, Tiruvannamalai, Dharampuri, Kanchipuram, Vellore, Chenn
ai, Tiruvallur.
 The massive waves from the December 2004 tsunami crossed the Bay of Bengal at
the speed of up to 500 miles per hour and wreaked havoc on India‘s southern coast.
The state of Tamil Nadu was worst hit; Kerala also saw extensive damage. Other states
such as Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal were affected to a lesser degree.
 The total number of affected people in Tamil Nadu (including those who died and
were displaced by the disaster) was 52,190 (Govt. of Tamil Nadu, 2005). In
Kerala, the tsunami killed or displaced 25,149 people
6/17/201330
CASE STUDY:NAGAPATTINAM
(TAMIL NADU)
6/17/201331
Nagapattinam district alone accounted for 76 percent of
the deaths of entire state and was the worst affected
district in India.
6/17/201332
CASE STUDY: NAGAPATTINAM DISTRICT (TAMILNADU)
 It is one of the coastal districts in Tamil
Nadu. Located between 10 15‘ to 11
30‘ N and 79 30‘ to 79 55‘ E,
 Nagapattinam was carved out of the
Thanjavur district in 1997.
 It is bounded by the Bay of Bengal on the
east, the Palk Strait on the South, the
Tiruvarur and Thanjavur District on the
West, and Northwest and Cuddalore
District on the North .
 This district forms a part of the Cauvery
river basin and delta. The district has a
coastline stretching up to 190 km.
 The total geographical area of the district
is around 3536.38 Sq. km and it still
continues to contribute its major share in
the production of rice in Tamil Nadu.
6/17/201333
KEYMAP OF NAGAPATTINAM DISTRICT
6/17/201334
6/17/201335
ERS – RADAR
IMAGE
TSUNAMI INUNDATION IN
NAGAPATTINAM COAST
6/17/201336
HISTORICAL PAST OF NAGAPATTINAM
DISTRICT
 A Coastal District having a large coast line of 141 kilometres. This District has a
numerous places of historical importance. Nagapattinam is an old Port Town.
 Nagapattinam is a multi-hazard prone district with heavy winds, cyclones, floods being a
regular feature. It has varied experience in handling these disasters but what happened on
26th December, 2004 was something beyond expectations.
 This District is having an area of 2715.83 Sq. Kms in its fold. The District Headquaters is
Nagapattinam. This district is enveloping 11 Panchayat Unions, 4 Municipalties, 8 Town
Panchayats on its Development Side. On the Revenue Side,it is housing 2 Revenue
divisions with 4 and 3 Taluks respectively and 523 revenueVillages.
HISTORY OF NATURAL DISASTERS IN THE PAST FIVE DECADES
Date of
occurrence
Calamity Damages caused
30.11.1952 Storm surge in land
upto 5 miles
400 lives
08.12.1967 Cyclone 7 lives lost and 15,000 rendered homeless
12.11.1977 Cyclone 560 lives lost and 196 missing. Damages to port, irrigation systems, road, power
supply and communication including large number of houses
01.12.1984 Floods due to heavy
rain
Crops damaged in large scale and normal life affected due to heavy floods
15.11.1991 Heavy rainfall Crops damaged
04.12.1993 Cyclone speed 188
kmph
1100 people lost their lives, severe damage to crops
29.10.2004 /
Nov 2004
Floods due to heavy
rain
Crops damaged, around 12,000 houses damaged
26.12.2004 Tsunami (Indian
Ocean)
6065 dead and 1922 injured. 12,821 cattle lost, large number of houses, boats and
infrastructure damaged
 When compared to other calamites the loss due to tsunami is more.6/17/201337
DISTRICT PROFILE
Revenue Divisions 2
Taluks 8
Municipalities 4
Panchayat Unions 11
Town Panchayats 8
Panchayats 434
Habitations 2508
Coastline 187 Kilometers
OCCUPATION AND POPULATION OF NAGAPATTINAM TOWN:
 It is surrounded by a number of ice factories for preserving the fish caught in the sea. The marine catch
mainly comprises of leognathics, sharks, flying fish, chank, catfish, prawns, silver bellies, crabs, rays and
other varieties. Mechanized boats, catamarans and country canoes are used for fishing. This major
fishing hub was severely destroyed during the Indian Ocean Tsunami of 2004.
POPULATION
Area Total
Households
Total
Population
Male Female Sex Area Population
Density
Rural 271827 1158557 576010 582547 1011 225.03 520.69
Urban 71786 330282 163064 167218 1025 191.97 1720.49
Total 343613 1488839 739064 749765 1014 2417.00 615.99
NAGAPATTINAM
THE BLACK SUNDAY
 In Tamil Nadu, the coastline is 1076 km long, which is twelve percent of entire Indian
coastline and has 13 coastal districts. All these districts were affected due to the
Tsunami.
SCALE OF DAMAGE
 The tsunami left around 6065 people dead and the entire coastline devastated in the
district. Around 73 habitations in 38 Revenue Villages and 5 Taluks were affected. Out
of these, 1776 were children (887 male, 889 females) which is approximately
6/17/201339
 one-third of the total dead and 2406 were women. The high death toll of children
and women highlighted the fact that Tsunami had caught people unawares.
 A possible explanation for the high number of deaths among women was that the
tsunami struck at a time when most of them were in the shore receiving their men
folk returning from the sea. Added to this was the fact that it was a day after the
Christmas and a Sunday morning, which had a large number of people, enjoying
the morning breeze.
Total Area 2.7 lakh hectares
Total Population 14.88 lakhs
Urban Population 3.3 lakhs
Rural Population 11.58 lakhs
Affected Population 1.96 lakhs
Fishermen 87 %
Agricultural Laborers 5 %
Traders 5%
Tourists/Pilgrims 3 %
6/17/201340
Of 19,736 houses, the construction of 19,019 have been completed & handed over to the
beneficiaries and 717 houses are under various stages of construction.
Construction 19,736 permanent houses have been planned for Tsunami victims who lost
their houses in Tsunami. 15,038 houses have been relocated site and 4,698 houses are being
constructed on in-situ sites.
Of 19,736 houses, the constructions of 17,701 houses have been taken up by the 58 NGOs
and 2,035 houses have been constructed by Government.
2,035 houses have been undertaken by the Government 1,143 houses are built by Tsunami
District Implementation Unit in rural areas and 892 houses by Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance
Board in urban areas.
Of 717 houses which are under various stages 409 houses by NGOs will be completed
before December 2009 and remaining 276 houses by Government will be completed by
November 2009.
CONSTRUCTION OF PERMANENT HOUSES
6/17/201341
RELIEF ASSISTANCE TO LOSS OF LIFE
Ex-gratia relief assistance paid to the legal heirs of 4,987 deceased in Tsunami at the rate of Rs.1.00 lakh from the
Chief Minister’s Relief Fund and Rs.1.00 lakh from the Prime Minister’s Public Relief Fund. Rs.99.74 crores
sanctioned to the victims of which 4,230 belong to Nagapattinam District, 517 from other Districts and 240 from
other States
Rs.138.25 crores spent on relief assistance to 2,611 injured persons in Tsunami.
Rs.7.00 lakhs spent on recanalisation to 40 women lost their children in Tsunami.
Rs.14.00 crores have been paid as a premium under Universal Health Insurance Scheme covering 68 lakhs Tsunami
victims under Insurance coverage
Rs.170.60 crores have been spent against the sanctioned amount of Rs.170.60 crores on basic amenities on the
construction sites like internal road, approach road, land filling, electricity connection, streetlights and livelihood.
Rs.11.50 crores sanctioned for execution of common sewerage system in urban areas by Tamil Nadu Water Supply
& Drainage Board (TWAD). Work is under progress.
All the houses in rural areas are built with toilet attached with individual septic tank with leach pit except 1,733
houses which were taken up by Government at the cost of Rs.150.41 lakhs
All the houses are insured for 10 years for the sum insured of Rs.69,07,600/-
6/17/201342
RECONSTRUCTION OF VULNERABLE HOUSES
Reconstruction of 87 vulnerable houses within 200 mtrs from HTL in rural areas have been taken up
under Rajiv Gandhi Rehabilitation Package for Tsunami Affected Areas. All the houses are handed over
to the beneficiaries.
Reconstruction of 269 vulnerable houses within 200 mtrs from HTL in urban areas have been taken up
under Rajiv Gandhi Rehabilitation Package for Tsunami Affected Areas 255 houses were handed over to
the beneficiaries. 11 houses under progress. 3 houses to be dropped.
1985 vulnerable houses have been identified from 200 mtrs to 1000 mtrs of HTL in rural areas which are
to be constructed under the assistance of World Bank by Rural Development and Panchayat Raj
Department.
THE NUTSHELL OF TSUNAMI RELIEF AND REHABILITATION ACTIVITIES IN
NAGAPATTINAM:
The Office of Prime Minister sanctioned Rs.111.39 crores for Tsunami victims of which Rs.107.19
crores have been utilized.
Rs.81.13 crores sanctioned from Rajiv Gandhi Rehabilitation Package for Tsunami Affected Areas for
construction of houses and basic amenities of which Rs.78.98 crores have been spent.
BSNL sanctioned Rs.26.02 crores for construction of 1,020 permanent houses for Tsunami victims and
Rs.26.02 crores have been spent.
6/17/201343
Rs.148.46 crores have been spent from the Chief Minister’s Public Relief Fund for ex-gratia
payment to Loss of life and injured.
Rs.160.70 crores spent against Rs.119.20 crores from the Calamity Relief Fund.
Rs.46.67 crores have been spent for immediate restoration like debris clearance, approach road, etc.,
by the Government of Tamil Nadu.
Rs.6.17 crores have been utilized against Rs.6.25 crores under MPLADS for creation infrastructures
like old age home, school buildings, etc.
Rs.133.47 crores sanctioned by Asian Development Bank under TEAP for creation of infrastructures
and livelihood in Tsunami affected areas. Rs.110.80 crores have been spent out of Rs.133.47 crores.
The World Bank sanctioned Rs.112.49 crores under ETRP of which Rs.77.24 crores have been spent.
IFAD sanctioned Rs.49.83 crores for livelihood assistance in Tsunami affected areas through Self
Help Groups.
Apart from this the NGOs contributed around Rs.300 crores on various schemes for Tsunami Relief
& Rehabilitation activities.
6/17/201344
6/17/201345

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Tsunami

  • 1. SUBMITTED TO:MRS.SHIVANGI PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT FOR DISASTERS TSUNAMI Group IV C.CHERISHMA(10011BA006) P.L.PRASANNA(10011BA015) B.PRAMOD KUMAR(10011BA025) SHYAM SUNDHAR(10011BA033) BHANUPRAKASH(09011BA006) M.PUSHPALATHA(08011BA019) 6/17/2013
  • 2. OVER VIEW  WHAT IS TSUNAMI & CAUSE OF TSUNAMI  CHARACTERISTICS OF A TSUNAMI.  IMPACTS OF TSUNAMI  MAJOR TSUNAMIS IN WORLD & IN INDIA  AREAS EFFECTED & IMPACT OF TSUNAMI 2004 IN INDIA  LOCAL BODIES AND AGENCIES RESPONSE AND RECOVERY & RECONSTRUCTION ASSISTANCE  POLICIES IN INDIA  DISASTER MANAGEMENT  CASE STUDY 6/17/20132
  • 3.  DEFINITION: A TSUNAMI is a series of water waves caused by the displacement of a large volume of a body of water, typically an ocean or a large lake.  GENERATION MECHANISM (CAUSE) OFTSUNAMI. • The principal generation mechanism (or cause) of a tsunami is the displacement of a substantial volume of water or perturbation of the sea.  SEISMICITY  LANDSLIDES.  METEOTSUNAMI 6/17/20133
  • 4.  Travel at speeds of up to 400-500 miles per hour  In deep waters, tsunamis are low and wide, often less than three feet high  As much as 95 miles between the crest of one wave and the next.  Can reach up to heights of 100 feet or more and crash inland.  When the wave enters shallow water, it slows down and its amplitude (height) increases.  While everyday wind waves have a wavelength (from crest to crest) of about 100 metres (330 ft) and a height of roughly 2 metres (6.6 ft), a tsunami in the deep ocean has a wavelength of about 200 kilometres (120 mi). 6/17/20134 CHARACTERISTICS OF A TSUNAMI.
  • 5. IMPACTS OF TSUNAMI  HUMANITARIAN: It has been reported that severe damage has been inflicted on ecosystems such as mangroves, coral reefs, forests, coastal wetlands, vegetation, sand dunes and rock formations, animal and plant biodiversity and groundwater.  ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT: It has been reported that severe damage has been inflicted on ecosystems such as mangroves, coral reefs, forests, coastal wetlands, vegetation, sand dunes and rock formations, animal and plant biodiversity and groundwater.  ECONOMICAL IMPACT: The two main occupations affected by the tsunami were fishing and tourism. The impact on coastal fishing communities and the people living there, some of the poorest in the region 6/17/20135
  • 6. 6/17/20136 LIVES LOST IN SOME MAJOR TSUNAMIS
  • 8. 8 LIST OF TSUNAMIS THAT AFFECTED INDIA
  • 9. TSUNAMI 2004 IN INDIA  The earthquake and resulting tsunami in the Indian Ocean on December 26th, 2004 had a devastating effect on India. According to the Indian government, almost 11,000 people died in the tsunami and over 5,000 are missing and feared dead (Ministry of Home Affairs).  Along India's southeastern coast, several villages were swept away, and thousands of fishermen at sea were missing.  India' mainland, hardest hit was the state of Tamil Nadu. The southern peninsular region comprising Kerala and part of Tamil Nadu on the west coast and the rest of Tamil Nadu.  The 9.0 magnitude (for 5 minutes) quake created a series of tsunamis that caused great destruction and loss of life throughout the Indian Ocean basin, within several hours of the initial event. 6/17/20139
  • 10. AREAS EFFECTED BY TSUNAMI 2004 IN INDIA  ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS:The tsunami hit hard the Andaman and Nicobar group which comprises of a total of 572 islands of which 38 were significantly inhabited.The waves literally washed away some of these islands.  KERALA:The tsunami killed many people (official toll 168) and caused extensive destruction particularly at Kollam (131 dead), Alappuzha (32) and Ernakulam (5) were also affected.  PONDICHERRY:In the Union territory of Pondicherry, the affected districts were Pondicherry (107 dead), Karaikal (453 dead). The latest official toll was 560. An estimated 30,000 people were rendered homeless .  TAMIL NADU:The overall death toll in the state was 7,793. The Nagapattinam district had 5,525 casualties. The latest reported death toll at Velankanni was 1,500. Kanyakumari district has had 808 deaths, Cuddalore district 599, the state capital Chennai 206 and Kancheepuram district 124.  ANDHRA PRADESH:There was significant loss of life and destruction. The affected districts were Krishna, Prakasam, Nellore, Guntur, West Godavari and East Godavari. 6/17/201310
  • 12. DETAILS OF IMPACT OF THE TSUNAMIS OF 26TH DECEMBER, 2004 - ON THE MAIN LAND ST ATES Details Andhra Pradesh Kerala Tamil Nadu Pondicherry Total Coastal length affected in km 985 250 1000 25 2260 Percentage of water into main land 0.50-2.0 1-2 1-1.5 0.30-3.0 - Average height of the tidal wave 5 Mtrs 3-5 Mtrs 7-10 Mtrs 10 Mtrs - No. of villages affected 301 187 373 33 894 Population affected(in lakh) 2.11 24.70 8.85 0.43 36.09 Dwelling units 1557 17381 124227 10061 153226 Cattle lost 195 NR 5477 506 6178 Cropped area (Ha) 790 NR 2589 792 4171  Tsunami impact is more on tamil nadu state when compared to other states. 6/17/201312
  • 13. LOCAL BODIES AND AGENCIES ARE SEEKING PUBLIC HELPAND CONTRIBUTIONS  Indian Prime Minister's National Relief Fund  The Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has issued an appeal for contributions.  International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies donation  International Committee of the Red Cross donation page  The Hindu Relief Fund  Tamil Nadu Chief Minister's Public Relief Fund  NDTV's trust fund  A listing of News and information about resources, aid, donations and volunteer efforts by a volunteer team of bloggers. Fresh information can be posted here.  A blog of India-related relief efforts  Volunteers for India Development and Empowerment requests on-line donations to provide for immediate relief to disaster victims  Site run by the South Indian Federation of Fishermen Societies (SIFFS) 6/17/201313
  • 14. RESPONSE AND RECOVERY Ex Gratia S .no Government Ex Gratia 1 Government of India *The prime minister has announced an ex-gratia payment of RS.100000 to the next of kin of each deceased. *The ex-gratia payment will be made from the prime minister’s national relief fund. 2 State Government of Tamil Nadu The chief minister has announced an ex-gratia payment of RS.100000 to the families of each of the victims. 3 State Government of kerala Ex-gratia of RS.50000 to the next kin of those killed. Assistance of RS.10000 for the families of the deceased, to meet the funeral expenses. 4 Union territory of pondicherry *The chief minister N Rangasamy has announced an ex gratia of RS.100000 to the next of kin of the dead. *The administration would also pay an ex gratia of RS.5000 towards funeral expenditure. *For those injured in the disaster, the administration would provide RS.5000. *A sum of RS.10000 to enable the homeless to reconstruct houses.
  • 15. RECONSTRUCTION ASSISTANCE BY AGENCY / INSTITUTION AGENCY / INSTITUTION ANDHRA PRADESH KERELA TAMIL NADU PONDI CHERRY Government Housing and boats Land acquisition, housing, boats NGOs Housing Housing and boats Housing ADB Reconstruction of ports, rural and municipal infrastructure (except rural water supply), roads, micro enterprises Reconstruction of ports, rural and municipal infrastructure, micro - enterprise UN Hazard risk management, health services and primary education IFAD Livelihood rehabilitation in affected coastal fisheries World Bank Revitalizing affected fisheries and micro – enterprises, reconstruction of rural & municipal infrastructure Rural Water Supply Reconstruction of housing, public buildings and highways, and limited support in restoration of agriculture, horticulture, animal husbandry and fisheries infrastructure Reconstruction of housing, fisheries infrastructure and restoration of agriculture
  • 16. POLICIES IN INDIA NATIONAL POLICY ON DISASTER MANAGEMENT (NPDM)  The National Policy on Disaster Management (NPDM) has been prepared in tune with and in pursuance of the Disaster Management Act, 2005 with a vision to build a safe and disaster resilient India by developing a holistic, proactive, multi-disaster oriented and technology driven strategy through a culture of prevention, mitigation, preparedness and response.  The NPDM aims to bring in transparency and accountability in all aspects of disaster management through involvement of community, community based organizations, Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), local bodies and civil society. THE DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACT, 2005  The Act provides for the legal and institutional framework for the effective management of disasters.  The Act mandates creation of new institutions and assignment of specific roles for Central, State and Local Governments.  Under the provisions of the Act, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has been established under the Chairmanship of the Prime Minister and National Executive Committee (NEC) of Secretaries has been created to assist the NDMA in the performance of its functions 6/17/201316
  • 17. DISASTER MANAGEMENT FOR TSUNAMI IN INDIA DISASTER:A disaster is any event, natural or man-caused, which creates an intense negative impact on people, goods and services, and/or the environment, and exceeds the affected community’s internal capability to respond, prompting the need to seek outside assistance. DISASTER MANAGEMENT :it can be defined as the organization and management of resources and responsibilities for dealing with all humanitarian aspects of emergencies, in particular preparedness, response and recovery in order to lessen the impact of disasters.  THE COMPRHENESIVE DISASTER MANAGEMENT (CDM) CYCLE 6/17/201317
  • 18. DIASTER MANAGEMENT CYCLE 6/17/201318 ORGANISATIONS INVOLVED  PREVENTION Research Institutions (Sponsored Research) Ministry of Earth Science (IMD, DOD, DST) Ministry of Water Resources Ministry of Agriculture  MITIGATION Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA, MUD, MoEF and other related ministries and departments) State Govt. (Various Departments) District/Local Administration and NGO’s  PREPAREDNESS Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA, MUD, MoEF) State Govt. District/Local Administration and NGO’s
  • 19. DIASTER MANAGEMENT CYCLE 6/17/201319 ORGANISATIONS INVOLVED  RESPONSE Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA) State Govt. District/Local Administration and NGO’s  RELIEF Central Govt. (NDMA. MHA) State Govt. District/Local Administration and NGO’s  REHABILITATION Central Govt. (Integrated efforts of various ministries and departments) State Govt. District/Local Administration and NGO’s  RECONSTRUCTION Central Govt. (Integrated efforts of various ministries and departments) State Govt. District/Local Administration and NGO’s  LONG TERM RECOVERY Central, State, Local Govt. and NGO’s
  • 20.  MITIGATION: During the mitigation phase structural and non-structural measures are undertaken to limit the adverse impact of natural hazards, environmental degradation and technological hazards. STRUCTURAL MITIGATION MEASURES  Permanent structures strictly according to BIS codes  Retrofitting of vulnerable structures for tsunami/cyclone resistance  Retrofitting of important buildings I. Fire stations / police stations/ army structures/ hospitals II. VIP residences / offices/ railways, airport, etc. III. Schools/colleges IV. Hazardous industries V. Other critical structures (i.e. power stations, warehouses, oil and other storage tanks etc) 6/17/201320 MITIGATION MEASURES
  • 21. MITIGATION MEASURES 6/17/201321 NON-STRUCTURAL MITIGATION MEASURES  Education  Public Awareness  Information  Risk Communication  Training to all concerned (Govt. officials, search and rescue workers, volunteers, women, children, elderly, local community as a whole)  Coastal regulations Zone Act – Strict implementation (no development within 500 m of the high tide line with elevation of less than 10 m above m.s.l)  Land use Zoning in accordance with CRZ
  • 22. MITIGATION MEASURES 6/17/201322  Natural Bioshields (Mangroves) and shelterbelt plantations (Casuarina)  Maintaining Natural Sand dunes  Maintaining and promoting beach development
  • 23. PREPAREDNESS 6/17/201323  PREPAREDNESS: Preparedness activities are geared towards minimizing disaster damage, enhancing disaster response operations and preparing organizations and individuals to respond. They also involve planning, organizing, training, interaction with other organizations and related agencies, resource inventory, allocation and placement, and plan testing.  TSUNAMI PREPAREDNESS FOR FAR-FIELD AND LOCAL TSUNAMIS  MEDICAL PREPAREDNESS. RESPONSE  RESPONSE: Actions carried out in a disaster situation with the objective to save life, alleviate suffering and reduce economic losses.  Emergency Tsunami Response.  Emergency Search and Rescue.  Emergency Relief.  Incident Response System.  Community-Based Disaster Response.
  • 24. RESPONSE 6/17/201324  Involvement of Corporate Sector.  Improving Tsunami Response.  Emergency Medical Response.  RECOVERY:  In the recovery phase, also referred to as the recovery and rehabilitation phase, activities are geared towards the restoration of basic services and the beginning of the repair of physical, social and economic damage e.g. lifelines, health and communication facilities, as well as utility systems.
  • 25. SPECIFIC MEASURES FOR SAFETY FROM TSUNAMIS EFFECT DESIGN SOLUTION Hydrodynamic forces (pushing forces on the front face building and drag caused by flow around the building  elevate building to avoid  design for dynamic water forces on walls &building elements.  anchor building to foundation. Debris impact  elevate building to avoid  design for impact loads scour  use deeper foundation.  protect against scour and erosion around foundation 6/17/201325
  • 26. SPECIFIC DESIGN PRINCIPLES FOR TSUNAMI  Know the Tsunami Risk at the site.  Avoid new developments in Tsunami Run-up Areas  Site Planning Strategies to reduce Tsunami Risk  Tsunami Resistant Buildings – New Developments  Protection of existing buildings and infrastructure – Assessment, Retrofit, Protection measures.  Special Precautions in locating and designing infrastructure and critical facilities  Planning for Evacuation 6/17/201326
  • 28. YEAR 2004 TSUNAMI AND THE TAMIL NADU COAST OF INDIA  Around 13 coastal districts were affected by the tsunami in the state of Tamil Nadu. Most, severely were affected Nagapattinam, Cuddalore, Chennai, Kancheepuram and Kanakumari districts (Govt. of Tamil Nadu, 2005).  Many casualties were detected in 80 places where pilgrims and tourists flock, such as Velankanni and Kanyakumari, at the southern tip of India, and on Marina Beach in Chennai .  The damage to the fishing community who inhabit the land closest to the these fishing communities face the long-term consequences of lost homes, destroyed village infrastructure and total loss of livelihood when boats and fishing equipment were lost. 6/17/201328
  • 29. AREAS AFFECTED IN TAMIL NADU COAST 6/17/2013
  • 30. AREAS AFFECTED IN TAMIL NADU COAST  The places covered in the map of Tamil Nadu are Coimbatore, Udagamangalam, Nilgiris, Erode, Namakkal, Ariyalur, Nagappattinam, C uddalore Pondicherry,Viluppuram, Tiruvannamalai, Dharampuri, Kanchipuram, Vellore, Chenn ai, Tiruvallur.  The massive waves from the December 2004 tsunami crossed the Bay of Bengal at the speed of up to 500 miles per hour and wreaked havoc on India‘s southern coast. The state of Tamil Nadu was worst hit; Kerala also saw extensive damage. Other states such as Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal were affected to a lesser degree.  The total number of affected people in Tamil Nadu (including those who died and were displaced by the disaster) was 52,190 (Govt. of Tamil Nadu, 2005). In Kerala, the tsunami killed or displaced 25,149 people 6/17/201330
  • 31. CASE STUDY:NAGAPATTINAM (TAMIL NADU) 6/17/201331 Nagapattinam district alone accounted for 76 percent of the deaths of entire state and was the worst affected district in India.
  • 33. CASE STUDY: NAGAPATTINAM DISTRICT (TAMILNADU)  It is one of the coastal districts in Tamil Nadu. Located between 10 15‘ to 11 30‘ N and 79 30‘ to 79 55‘ E,  Nagapattinam was carved out of the Thanjavur district in 1997.  It is bounded by the Bay of Bengal on the east, the Palk Strait on the South, the Tiruvarur and Thanjavur District on the West, and Northwest and Cuddalore District on the North .  This district forms a part of the Cauvery river basin and delta. The district has a coastline stretching up to 190 km.  The total geographical area of the district is around 3536.38 Sq. km and it still continues to contribute its major share in the production of rice in Tamil Nadu. 6/17/201333
  • 34. KEYMAP OF NAGAPATTINAM DISTRICT 6/17/201334
  • 35. 6/17/201335 ERS – RADAR IMAGE TSUNAMI INUNDATION IN NAGAPATTINAM COAST
  • 36. 6/17/201336 HISTORICAL PAST OF NAGAPATTINAM DISTRICT  A Coastal District having a large coast line of 141 kilometres. This District has a numerous places of historical importance. Nagapattinam is an old Port Town.  Nagapattinam is a multi-hazard prone district with heavy winds, cyclones, floods being a regular feature. It has varied experience in handling these disasters but what happened on 26th December, 2004 was something beyond expectations.  This District is having an area of 2715.83 Sq. Kms in its fold. The District Headquaters is Nagapattinam. This district is enveloping 11 Panchayat Unions, 4 Municipalties, 8 Town Panchayats on its Development Side. On the Revenue Side,it is housing 2 Revenue divisions with 4 and 3 Taluks respectively and 523 revenueVillages.
  • 37. HISTORY OF NATURAL DISASTERS IN THE PAST FIVE DECADES Date of occurrence Calamity Damages caused 30.11.1952 Storm surge in land upto 5 miles 400 lives 08.12.1967 Cyclone 7 lives lost and 15,000 rendered homeless 12.11.1977 Cyclone 560 lives lost and 196 missing. Damages to port, irrigation systems, road, power supply and communication including large number of houses 01.12.1984 Floods due to heavy rain Crops damaged in large scale and normal life affected due to heavy floods 15.11.1991 Heavy rainfall Crops damaged 04.12.1993 Cyclone speed 188 kmph 1100 people lost their lives, severe damage to crops 29.10.2004 / Nov 2004 Floods due to heavy rain Crops damaged, around 12,000 houses damaged 26.12.2004 Tsunami (Indian Ocean) 6065 dead and 1922 injured. 12,821 cattle lost, large number of houses, boats and infrastructure damaged  When compared to other calamites the loss due to tsunami is more.6/17/201337
  • 38. DISTRICT PROFILE Revenue Divisions 2 Taluks 8 Municipalities 4 Panchayat Unions 11 Town Panchayats 8 Panchayats 434 Habitations 2508 Coastline 187 Kilometers OCCUPATION AND POPULATION OF NAGAPATTINAM TOWN:  It is surrounded by a number of ice factories for preserving the fish caught in the sea. The marine catch mainly comprises of leognathics, sharks, flying fish, chank, catfish, prawns, silver bellies, crabs, rays and other varieties. Mechanized boats, catamarans and country canoes are used for fishing. This major fishing hub was severely destroyed during the Indian Ocean Tsunami of 2004. POPULATION Area Total Households Total Population Male Female Sex Area Population Density Rural 271827 1158557 576010 582547 1011 225.03 520.69 Urban 71786 330282 163064 167218 1025 191.97 1720.49 Total 343613 1488839 739064 749765 1014 2417.00 615.99
  • 39. NAGAPATTINAM THE BLACK SUNDAY  In Tamil Nadu, the coastline is 1076 km long, which is twelve percent of entire Indian coastline and has 13 coastal districts. All these districts were affected due to the Tsunami. SCALE OF DAMAGE  The tsunami left around 6065 people dead and the entire coastline devastated in the district. Around 73 habitations in 38 Revenue Villages and 5 Taluks were affected. Out of these, 1776 were children (887 male, 889 females) which is approximately 6/17/201339
  • 40.  one-third of the total dead and 2406 were women. The high death toll of children and women highlighted the fact that Tsunami had caught people unawares.  A possible explanation for the high number of deaths among women was that the tsunami struck at a time when most of them were in the shore receiving their men folk returning from the sea. Added to this was the fact that it was a day after the Christmas and a Sunday morning, which had a large number of people, enjoying the morning breeze. Total Area 2.7 lakh hectares Total Population 14.88 lakhs Urban Population 3.3 lakhs Rural Population 11.58 lakhs Affected Population 1.96 lakhs Fishermen 87 % Agricultural Laborers 5 % Traders 5% Tourists/Pilgrims 3 % 6/17/201340
  • 41. Of 19,736 houses, the construction of 19,019 have been completed & handed over to the beneficiaries and 717 houses are under various stages of construction. Construction 19,736 permanent houses have been planned for Tsunami victims who lost their houses in Tsunami. 15,038 houses have been relocated site and 4,698 houses are being constructed on in-situ sites. Of 19,736 houses, the constructions of 17,701 houses have been taken up by the 58 NGOs and 2,035 houses have been constructed by Government. 2,035 houses have been undertaken by the Government 1,143 houses are built by Tsunami District Implementation Unit in rural areas and 892 houses by Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board in urban areas. Of 717 houses which are under various stages 409 houses by NGOs will be completed before December 2009 and remaining 276 houses by Government will be completed by November 2009. CONSTRUCTION OF PERMANENT HOUSES 6/17/201341
  • 42. RELIEF ASSISTANCE TO LOSS OF LIFE Ex-gratia relief assistance paid to the legal heirs of 4,987 deceased in Tsunami at the rate of Rs.1.00 lakh from the Chief Minister’s Relief Fund and Rs.1.00 lakh from the Prime Minister’s Public Relief Fund. Rs.99.74 crores sanctioned to the victims of which 4,230 belong to Nagapattinam District, 517 from other Districts and 240 from other States Rs.138.25 crores spent on relief assistance to 2,611 injured persons in Tsunami. Rs.7.00 lakhs spent on recanalisation to 40 women lost their children in Tsunami. Rs.14.00 crores have been paid as a premium under Universal Health Insurance Scheme covering 68 lakhs Tsunami victims under Insurance coverage Rs.170.60 crores have been spent against the sanctioned amount of Rs.170.60 crores on basic amenities on the construction sites like internal road, approach road, land filling, electricity connection, streetlights and livelihood. Rs.11.50 crores sanctioned for execution of common sewerage system in urban areas by Tamil Nadu Water Supply & Drainage Board (TWAD). Work is under progress. All the houses in rural areas are built with toilet attached with individual septic tank with leach pit except 1,733 houses which were taken up by Government at the cost of Rs.150.41 lakhs All the houses are insured for 10 years for the sum insured of Rs.69,07,600/- 6/17/201342
  • 43. RECONSTRUCTION OF VULNERABLE HOUSES Reconstruction of 87 vulnerable houses within 200 mtrs from HTL in rural areas have been taken up under Rajiv Gandhi Rehabilitation Package for Tsunami Affected Areas. All the houses are handed over to the beneficiaries. Reconstruction of 269 vulnerable houses within 200 mtrs from HTL in urban areas have been taken up under Rajiv Gandhi Rehabilitation Package for Tsunami Affected Areas 255 houses were handed over to the beneficiaries. 11 houses under progress. 3 houses to be dropped. 1985 vulnerable houses have been identified from 200 mtrs to 1000 mtrs of HTL in rural areas which are to be constructed under the assistance of World Bank by Rural Development and Panchayat Raj Department. THE NUTSHELL OF TSUNAMI RELIEF AND REHABILITATION ACTIVITIES IN NAGAPATTINAM: The Office of Prime Minister sanctioned Rs.111.39 crores for Tsunami victims of which Rs.107.19 crores have been utilized. Rs.81.13 crores sanctioned from Rajiv Gandhi Rehabilitation Package for Tsunami Affected Areas for construction of houses and basic amenities of which Rs.78.98 crores have been spent. BSNL sanctioned Rs.26.02 crores for construction of 1,020 permanent houses for Tsunami victims and Rs.26.02 crores have been spent. 6/17/201343
  • 44. Rs.148.46 crores have been spent from the Chief Minister’s Public Relief Fund for ex-gratia payment to Loss of life and injured. Rs.160.70 crores spent against Rs.119.20 crores from the Calamity Relief Fund. Rs.46.67 crores have been spent for immediate restoration like debris clearance, approach road, etc., by the Government of Tamil Nadu. Rs.6.17 crores have been utilized against Rs.6.25 crores under MPLADS for creation infrastructures like old age home, school buildings, etc. Rs.133.47 crores sanctioned by Asian Development Bank under TEAP for creation of infrastructures and livelihood in Tsunami affected areas. Rs.110.80 crores have been spent out of Rs.133.47 crores. The World Bank sanctioned Rs.112.49 crores under ETRP of which Rs.77.24 crores have been spent. IFAD sanctioned Rs.49.83 crores for livelihood assistance in Tsunami affected areas through Self Help Groups. Apart from this the NGOs contributed around Rs.300 crores on various schemes for Tsunami Relief & Rehabilitation activities. 6/17/201344