Sunday, September 11, 2022

Enjoy Namdhapa National Park and Tiger Reserve from 8-14 October 2022

 The Bombay Natural History Society has arranged a nature trail from 8th October 2022 to 14 October 2022 to one of 12 Biodiversity Hotspots in the world, the Namdhapa National  Park and Tiger Reserve in Arunachal Pradesh. See details at

https://www.bnhs.org/nature-trails-details/namdapha-national-park
Discover the wonders of gross nature products of this hotspot by using this opportunity in these days of a rapidly changing climate.
You will be greeted with one of the last places of  magnificent nature and savour it for seven days of unbelievable experience of the diverse richness of nature. The above link gives all contact details of BNHS that is needed to make the trip a memorable personal adventure ever!
Meet you there, hurry and enroll for the trip.
Best wishes,

Ramaswami Ashok Kumar, Member.

Thursday, September 8, 2022

REVERDURE BENGALURU(AND THE WORLD) NOW

Table 2 

The Great Bangalore Floods of 4-5 September 2022: The Root Cause is the World’s Dams and their Dynamics.

© 2022 Ramaswami Ashok Kumar

1.0 The world’s dams are causing earthquakes during any period at least 100 times more than the number prior to the dam era which began in earnest by 1900. Thus earthquakes are used as proxy to measure dam content changes in any study period.  From 3 hrs UTC on 4 September 2022 to 3 hrs UTC on 5 September 2022, there was flooding in Bengaluru Rural and Urban areas on account of extreme rains(Table 1) and people had to use boats for travel to survive the sudden submergence of roads under floods which became rivers. People used tractors to travel to their offices and probably bulldozers too. 

2.0 Here an input/output analysis is made to assess the reasons behind the quantum of extremes of rain and suggest ways to prevent this extreme input of water. It is shown that just creating enough drainage (outflow) is not enough.   

3.0 What is the root cause of this extreme inputs of water?

3.1 The root cause of the extreme inputs of water is the world’s dams(1).

3.2 The dam content changes which cause the extreme inputs of water are assessed by the proxy of earthquakes caused by dams. See Table 2: Worldwide  Earthquakes 2.5MM magnitude and above between 3h UTC on 4 September 2022 and 3h UTC on 5th September,  in attached Excel File.

3.3 See Table 1 for the inputs and outputs in the Bangalore area for the Dam content changes for the 24 h day ended 03h UTC on 5th September 2022. The total world dam content change for the day is 1.078 BCM. Through World Dam Dynamics(1), this causes the rainfall in Bengaluru Rural(R)( area 1391.15 km^2) of 79.8 mm(Source IMD.gov.in) which is an input water of 0.111 BCM. Using data on  All India dry biomass density(above and below ground)(2)( both Urban and Rural), a derived value of 130 T/ha is used for the Bangalore Area to arrive at total transpired water for the day of 0.0181 BCM for Bengaluru Rural. The extra input water into Bengaluru Rural  for the day  due to the world’s dams is 6.138 times the Rural transpired water. This extra water floods is exacerbated tremendously by the shock input water moment(Force x distance) by the day’s global dam content changes by shock rise in temperature of Bengaluru Rural at the choking rate of 4396 degrees Celsius per hour(each shock input lasting only some milliseconds but increasing at an  unimaginably high rate from one dam content change to another at frequencies of seconds to minutes to hours  during that day( Table 2 in Excel File attached).

Similarly one reads the saga of the tragedy for Bengaluru Urban as well in Table 1.

4.0 The Perfect Design for alleviating the scandalous designs of modern civilization, a society of specialists, has several facets to be implemented by fast track collective care and planning.

4.1 Forests, their preservation and reverdure on a war footing by analogous ecologically compatible reforestation learning from the natural forests and their communities. Table 1 shows that increasing dry biomass density of the Bendkaluru by six or seven times the estimated dry biomass density can absorb the surge of input water. But how about the shock input temperature rate mentioned above (Section 3.3) brought about by World Dam dynamics? Attempt a good sewerless system and a good drainage.  

4.2 Demolish the dams.

The dams by creating such extreme shock temperature inputs are causing 92% of the climate change. GHGs cause only 8% of the climate change(1). But plants, from their fundamental physiological properties not only avoid earthquakes but also these high temperatures by their atmospheric distribution networks by osmosis and transpiration and circulate the groundwaters several times through the help of the sun sucking the waters from its extraterrestrial fusion energy at infinite efficiency! Dams by killing rivers and dead concentration of waters behind them have systematically melted the cores of nuclear power stations and the fuel pools stored at the stations and waste storage sites from 1957(Urals) to the present( Fukushima). The world’s dams interfere with reforestation efforts by powdering the mountains like they are doing in the Himalayas, Himachal Pradesh, Kerala, Karnataka, and flooding all over the world and causing heat waves and fires and many other destructions of life and property. That’s why God created trees!

5. References.

1. Ramaswami Ashok Kumar. 2022. PERFECT DESIGNS: INDIAN SW MONSOON INTRA-SEASONAL VARIABILITY IS CAUSED BY THE WORLD'S DAMS. Blogspot.

Link: https://livingnormally.blogspot.com/2022/05/indian-sw-monsoon-intra-seasonal.html

2. Draft IPCC Good Practice Guidance for LULUCF: Chapter 3: LUCF Sector Good Practice Guidance: ANNEX 3A.1 Biomass Default Tables for Section 3.2 Forest Land

Tables and Pictures



The Bengaluru Area(Google Earth)