Friday, November 21, 2025

About politics and managing disasters - Davis Automatic Weather Station (AWS) distribution in Sikkim and Sub-Himalayan West Bengal (Darjeeling and Kalimpong districts)

SaveTheHills has long recognised the critical need for real-time weather data in the Himalayas, where conditions can shift rapidly and with little warning. Since 2016, we have operated Davis Vantage Pro2 AWS units at two locations and have consistently highlighted the need for a denser network of such stations across the mountain region.
Kalimpong and Darjeeling are two adjoining hill districts of West Bengal, while Sikkim—though a separate state—forms a contiguous stretch of the same Himalayan terrain. In fact, according to Google Earth, my home in Tirpai, Kalimpong (West Bengal), is just 2.185 km from Melli in South Sikkim.

So I was rather surprised when I read this article in papers today about the inspection of 67 AWS in Sikkim state:
All 67 Davis AWS units in Sikkim were supplied by the Government—specifically the Department of Science and Technology (DST)—and the India Meteorological Department (IMD) is now working with DST to upgrade and overhaul these stations.

In contrast, the hill areas of Darjeeling and Kalimpong districts have only five Davis AWS, all installed through the independent efforts of NGOs and private individuals. These units are operated and maintained entirely by us, without any government support. 
The locations of AWS:-
1. Kalimpong (operated by SaveTheHills)
2. Kurseong (operated by SaveTheHills)
3. Pedong (operated by Bal Suraksha Abhiyan)
4. Todey  (operated by Bal Suraksha Abhiyan)
5. St Paul's School, Darjeeling (operated by the school)

One Davis Vantage Pro 2 AWS was installed in Gorubathan (W Bengal) by the Kalimpong district administration some years ago but has steadfastly remained defunct thereafter.

Comparative Size and Population of Sikkim and Darjeeling/Kalimpong.

Size of Hill areas of Darjeeling and Kalimpong districts: 2,478.31 km²
Population of Darjeeling and Kalimpong districts: 
875,713.
Size of Sikkim: 7,096 km²
Population of Sikkim: 610,577
                                                                                - source ChatGPT

SaveTheHills had also reached out to the district administration for support in expanding AWS coverage in Darjeeling and Kalimpong. A formal letter to the Gorkha Territorial Administration (GTA) was drafted on 30 December 2021 and handed over at the time to a senior party official. The letter is reproduced below:
The letter has not seen the light of day since then and we in Darjeeling/Kalimpong continue to work with only 5 Davis AWS.

If political differences lead to such uneven treatment of regions that share the same geography, face identical hazards, and are equally vulnerable, then our ability to manage disasters becomes severely compromised. This is especially troubling in the Himalayas, where the landscape is far more fragile and exposed to multiple, overlapping hazards.

Praful Rao,
savethehills@gmail.com
9475033744

  

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

An article by Dr R.K Bhandari - 'Where the Hills Remember, We Forget'

 Remembering the 1968 Darjeeling–Sikkim Catastrophe and the Lessons Lost in the Thin Himalayan Air

Where the Hills Remember, We Forget

The Mountain’s Enduring Reminder

Each year, the anniversary of the 1968 Darjeeling–Sikkim catastrophe reminds us of one of the most devastating multi-hazard events in the history of the Indian Himalaya. The tragedy was monumental—not only for the scale of its destruction but also for the enduring silence that followed. We must continue to remember this event, not merely to mourn its loss but to internalize the lessons it sought to teach—lessons that, if truly learned, could transform how we understand and manage our fragile mountain systems.

Disasters arrive as wake-up calls. Yet, time and again, we have slept through them. The dynamic equilibrium of the Himalaya is inextricably tied to its climate, geology, forests, water resources, and human interventions. Indiscriminate construction and unregulated development now threaten more than 45 million people living in the Himalayan region—and nearly seven times that number in the plains that depend on it (Bhandari, 1986). The future of both is inseparable.

1968: When the Himalaya Broke Loose

Between 2 and 6 October 1968, the Darjeeling–Sikkim Himalaya was battered by an extraordinary sequence of landslides, debris flows, and floods. Torrential rainfall lashed the fragile, steep, geologically young slopes—already compromised by deforestation, road cutting, and unchecked urbanization. The result was a chain reaction of slope failures and river blockages that cascaded through the region.

The worst-affected areas stretched from Kalimpong, Darjeeling, and Kurseong in West Bengal to Gangtok, Mangan, Namchi, and Rangpo in Sikkim. The Teesta, Rangit, and Rangpo Chu valleys witnessed massive slope collapses, debris accumulation, and flash floods downstream. Landslides blocked streams, altered drainage networks, and unleashed sudden bursts of water and debris. In Darjeeling alone, the Siliguri–Darjeeling Road was cut in dozens of places, paralysing transport and relief for months.

Spectacular failures marked the event—the collapse of the Anderson Bridge over the Teesta River on 4 October 1968, the destruction of critical sections of the Siliguri–Darjeeling and Siliguri–Gangtok highways, and extensive damage to tea estates, settlements, and communication infrastructure.

 The Lessons That Fade

The catastrophe of 1968 offered timeless lessons about terrain vulnerability, rainfall thresholds, the multiplier effect of connectivity loss, and the imperative of preparedness. Yet, these lessons faded into history—largely because we faltered on facts and failed to report with rigor.

When Data Deceive: Misreporting and Lost Opportunities Follow

Disasters are powerful teachers—but only if we are attentive students. Too often, we squander the opportunity to learn because we fail to decode their signatures scientifically. The value of any post-disaster learning depends entirely on the credibility and completeness of field data. Without evidence-based investigations, analysis, and contextual reporting, we lose the chance to extract actionable insight from catastrophe.

The Blind Spot: Rainfall Alone Cannot Explain It All

While the 1968 Darjeeling–Sikkim event was triggered by extreme rainfall, the fixation on rainfall alone obscured the multi-causal nature of the disaster. The region’s tectonic instability, anthropogenic disturbances, and poor slope management played equally significant roles.

The Centre for Science & Environment in Down To Earth (DTE) cited 20,000 landslides, but without clarifying the basis or criteria for this count. The figure was later echoed by ICIMOD, media outlets, and several researchers—none offering validation. Other studies cited about 7,500 landslides, also without standardized parameters. Such unverified numbers diluted the scientific understanding of the event.

The eastern Himalaya routinely records extreme rainfall events—ranging between 300 mm/day and 1,100 mm/day. In the 1980s, Sikkim’s annual rainfall reached 3,000–5,000 mm, with 50–90 % falling in just four months. Rainfall, river action, seismicity, deforestation, and blasting together amplify slope instability (Bhandari, 1988).

In 1968, a deep Bay of Bengal depression interacting with monsoon currents trapped along the Himalayan foothills caused nearly 100 hours of continuous rainfall. The IMD recorded 499 mm in one day and over 1,000 mm in 52 hours, while DTE and GSI reported totals of 1,000–1,040 mm for 3–5 October. For comparison, Padamchen in East Sikkim once recorded 1,580 mm in 36 hours (Chandra, 1973).

If a single catastrophic landslide demands detailed mapping, analysis, and remediation, how would we manage 20,000 such failures simultaneously? Many were likely inter-connected—progressive or retrogressive systems rather than isolated slides. Without classifying landslides by type, size, mechanism, and cause, no meaningful investigation or mitigation strategy is possible.

 Credible Loss Assessment: The Basis for Response

According to Down To Earth, approximately 20,000 people were killed, injured, or displaced—a figure often misinterpreted as fatalities alone. Some secondary sources vaguely reported “thousands killed,” while no authenticated death toll exists even today. What is certain is that damage was widespread and intense, devastating tea gardens, settlements, and market areas such as Rangpo, which lay buried under two metres of debris.

DTE also reported 92 road cuts, multiple bridge collapses (including the Anderson Bridge), and weeks-long railway closures. The GSI corroborated extensive breaches along the Siliguri–Darjeeling highway and major failures in the Teesta valley. Estimates suggest 10,000 homes partially or fully damaged, hundreds of bridges destroyed, and large sections of NH 31A washed away. Rivers like the Teesta and Rangit changed course in several places.

The confusion in reporting—some data referring to Darjeeling town, others to the district or to Sikkim—underscored a critical gap: credible, area-specific loss reporting is essential for a measured post-disaster response. Without clarity, policy and recovery both flounder.

A Clarion Call for Scientific Slope Engineering

The 1968 catastrophe was a clarion call for scientific landslide investigation and engineered slope management. Roads in Sikkim and North Bengal traverse elevations from 120 m to over 4,300 m, cutting across unstable ridges and deeply dissected valleys. Slopes vary from forested to barren, shaping complex hydrogeological responses. When roads are built without protecting natural drainage or stabilizing slopes, the mountains retaliate.

At the International Symposium on Landslides (New Delhi, 1980), Gen. J.S. Soin, then Director General of Border Roads, recounted the catastrophic slides of 1889, 1900, 1906, 1911, 1914, 1958, 1968, and 1973. He described a 1-km road section in 1968 completely destroyed—retaining walls gone, new alignments carved, drainage and river-training works repeatedly rebuilt after successive floods. Such cases illustrate that ad-hoc repairs are no substitute for science-based, environmentally consonant engineering.

More than five decades later, that lesson remains painfully relevant. The scars of both dormant and active slides demand ongoing investigation. Each reactivation is a reminder that the Himalaya remembers—even when we choose to forget.

Global Reflections on India’s 1968 Reporting

Dr R.L. Schuster of the United States Geological Survey once asked me to verify data on the 1968 catastrophe. Lacking credible evidence, he doubted reports of 20,000 landslides and 20,000 casualties. A UNESCO publication (Moscow, 1988) later cited Mathur (1982), estimating restoration costs at $14 million for North Bengal and $8 million for Sikkim. Even globally, the 1968 event stands as a cautionary tale—less for its magnitude than for the uncertainties that clouded its record.

The Way Forward: Learning Before Forgetting

The 1968 Darjeeling–Sikkim event reaffirmed that the future of landslide risk management must rest on E A R T H—Ethics, Accountability, Resilience, Technology, and Humanity.

For decades, the management of landslides and the mitigation of their societal impacts have run on parallel tracks, intersecting only at conferences or in official declarations. The time has come to walk the talk—to embed every lesson from every disaster into planning, design, and governance.

Ethical responsibility and societal well-being must sit at the heart of our disaster-mitigation agenda. Bridging the divide between scientific insight and public policy is no longer optional—it is the only path forward.

References

Bhandari, R.K. (1977) : Some Typical Landslides in the Himalaya. Proc. 2nd Int. Symp. on Landslides, Japan Society of Landslides, Tokyo, pp. 1–33.

1.      Bhandari, R.K. (1981) : Landslides in the Himalaya—Problems, Causes and Cures. UNESCO Project “Protection of Lithosphere as a Component of Environment,” Alma-Ata, USSR.

2.      Bhandari, R.K. (1986) : Slope Stability in the Fragile Himalaya and Strategy for Development. IGS Annual Lecture.

3.      Chandra, H. (1973) : Problems of Highway Engineers in the Himalayas. Journal of the Indian Roads Congress, 35(2), p. 363.

4.      Down To Earth (2023). Darjeeling and Sikkim: 1968’s Forgotten Deluge. Centre for Science and Environment.

5.      Telegraph India (1968). Darjeeling–Sikkim Devastation Déjà Vu: Autumnal Cloudburst Triggers Hill Horror.

6.      Geological Survey of India (1969). Report on the Landslides and Floods in the Darjeeling–Sikkim Himalaya.

7.      Indian Meteorological Department (1968). Climatological Report on the October 1968 Rainfall in Eastern Himalaya.

8.      Inventory and GIS Mapping of Landslides in Sikkim (ssdma.nic.in).

9.      Mathur, H.N. (1981) : Influence of Human Activities on Landslides. UNESCO Publication, Alma-Ata, USSR.

10.  Natarajan, T.K., R.K. Bhandari et al. (1980) : Some Case Records of Landslides in Sikkim. Proc. Int. Symp. on Landslides, Vol. 1, pp. 455–460.

11.  Starkel, L. (1972). The Role of Catastrophic Rainfall in the Shaping of the Darjeeling Himalaya. Geographia Polonica.

12.  Basu, S.R., & Sarkar, A.K. (1981). Landslides and Morpho dynamic Evolution in the Darjeeling Himalaya.

13.  Soin, J.S. (1980) : Landslide Problems on Roads in Sikkim and North Bengal and Measures Adopted to Control Them. Proc. Int. Symp. on Landslides, Vol. 1, pp. 69–78.

14.  Wikipedia. 1968 Sikkim Floods – Details of Rainfall, Fatalities, and Landslides.


My grateful thanks to Dr R.K Bhandari, whom I have known for many years now

Dr R.K Bhandari, is long acknowledged to be one of the foremost authorities on landslides in the world. He is the recipient of numerous, well deserved awards including the prestigious Subash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar in 2021.
He is a member of HA.

Praful Rao,
savethehills@gmail.com
9475033744