Impactof COVID-19 on water and sanitation in Mumbai slums

Publicado 2023-01-25
Seção Research Articles

Autores

  • Sougata Bera TERI School of Advanced Studies
  • M.A. Sherly TERI School of Advanced Studies
  • Kiran Kumar Janadri Arvee Associates, Hyderabad, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7770/safer-V10N1-art2544

Resumo

Mumbai City (19.07° N, 72.87° E) is the true example of ‘diversity in extreme level’. This well-known city is commonly known as the financialcapital of India and is the 12th richest city in the world. Mumbai city(Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai or MCGM)spreads around437.5km2,with 12.5 million populationas per Census 2011,with apopulation density of83,660 per km2andapproximately 6.5 million are living in the slums without proper access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH). There is a debatable topic, ‘water is a blessing or a curse?’ We know water means life but in monsoon season these views might lead to conflicts. Mumbaialone has recorded 585.5 mm precipitation in July resulting in severe flooding across the city. The slum communities of Mumbai are at the receiving endof these erratic patternsdue toinefficientdrainage and lack of basic facilities. This pandemic situation has proved again the urgency of WASH. WHO has already listed the COVID-19 virus as one of the most contagious diseases which has beenspreading exponentially due to the poor toilet facilities, lack of access to clean water and unhygienic activitiesin slums. The survey data from different slum communities configures their perception related to WASH and our study linksit with thepandemic and theresultantadaptive capacity ranking. Although most of the Mumbai slum has a good literacy rate (69%) but lack of awareness among these slum communities lead to a vulnerable situation. The slum clusters of Mumbai have become COVID-19 hotspotsand also resulted in losses of jobs and human lives. Through FCM (Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping) and SWOT analysis, the study discovers present social, technical, and economic aspects and perception of these slum communitiesto analyze their adaptive capacity towards COVID-19.