Take the case of the 2018 Kerala flood that killed 493 in the state, and affected millions of people. Advocate Jacob P Alex, the amicus curiae appointed by the Kerala high court in 2019 to assist it in flood-related cases, told the court that the intensity of the flood was aggravated due to the sudden release of water from different reservoirs during the torrential rains. India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru called huge dams “temples of modern India”. Apart from being a recreational spot, dams can easily absorb small and medium intensity floods. Kerala-based civil engineer, James Wilson, says, “Due to no occurrence of small floods, people start constructing on the floodplain of the river as they presume the area is safe.” When a high intensity flood occurs, people cannot anticipate the damage. Dumping of waste and unplanned construction on the riverbed intensify this damage. “Riverbeds are used for all kinds of wrong activities like dumping waste, illegal construction, and sand mining which make flooding even more damaging,” informs environmental activist and water expert Himanshu Thakkar.