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Discuss about the vulnerability of India to earthquake-related hazards. Give examples including the salient features of major disasters caused by earthquakes in different parts of India during the last three decades

Vulnerability of India to Earthquake-Related Hazards

Active Plate Tectonics – High seismicity in the Himalayan belt, North-East India, Kutch region, and Andaman-Nicobar Islands.

Wide Seismic Zonation

Zone V (Very High Risk) – Himalayan states, Kutch, Andaman & Nicobar.

Zone IV – Delhi, Bihar, parts of J&K and NE India.

Major cities such as Delhi, Guwahati, Srinagar, Imphal lie in high-risk zones.

Weak enforcement of earthquake-resistant building codes (BIS).

Rapid and Unplanned Urbanisation without seismic safety.

Secondary and Cascading Hazards – Landslides, liquefaction, fires, dam failure, and infrastructure collapse.

Vulnerability of critical infrastructure – Disruption of transport, power, water, and communication networks.

Examples of Major Earthquake Disasters in India (Last Three Decades)

Latur Earthquake, Maharashtra (1993)

Magnitude – ~6.3

Intraplate earthquake caused by reactivation of ancient fault lines in the Deccan Plateau

Over 9,000 deaths.

Bhuj Earthquake, Gujarat (2001)

Magnitude – 7.7

Intraplate fault movement due to stress transmitted from the Indian Plate-Eurasian Plate collision

Around 13,800 deaths and massive infrastructure loss.

Kashmir Earthquake (2005)

Magnitude – 7.6

Thrust faulting due to ongoing collision of the Indian Plate with the Eurasian Plate

Extensive landslides and isolation of remote villages.

Sikkim Earthquake (2011)

Magnitude – 6.9

Active tectonics of the Himalayan collision zone

Triggered widespread landslides.

Damage to roads, bridges, and hydropower projects.

Hazard zonation mapping, disaster resilient infrastructure and institutional strengthening for quick response and recovery is essential to achieve Sendai targets on disaster risk reduction.