Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on Bangladesh

Bangladesh is the biggest delta of the world. Construction of numbers of polders is one of the flood resilient approach. But the presence of coastal polders de-linked the flood plain. The siltation in river causes riverbeds to become higher than the adjacent crop lands, and vast area under the polde...

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Main Authors: Talchabhadel Rocky, Nakagawa Hajime, Kawaike Kenji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2016-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160712009
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spelling doaj-2bc71a18c44144a0a2ca23ddac534db82021-02-02T01:37:44ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422016-01-0171200910.1051/e3sconf/20160712009e3sconf_flood2016_12009Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on BangladeshTalchabhadel Rocky0Nakagawa Hajime1Kawaike Kenji2Ph. D. Student, Dept. of Civil and Earth Resources Engineering, Kyoto UniversityProfessor, Dept. of Civil and Earth Resources Engineering, Kyoto UniversityProfessor, Dept. of Civil and Earth Resources Engineering, Kyoto UniversityBangladesh is the biggest delta of the world. Construction of numbers of polders is one of the flood resilient approach. But the presence of coastal polders de-linked the flood plain. The siltation in river causes riverbeds to become higher than the adjacent crop lands, and vast area under the polders became permanently water logged rendering large tract of land uncultivable. The current practice is temporarily de-poldering by cutting embankment. This is a natural water management process with very little human interventions but it needs strong participation and consensus with a great deal of sacrifice by the stakeholders for a specific period (3 to 5 years or even more)[1]. An attempt has been made to study the phenomena of tidal basin management reviewing some secondary data and processes involved in successfully operated tidal basins of Bangladesh. And preliminary laboratory experiments are carried out to precisely look into the suspended sediment transport. With varying outflow discharge and sediment supply, the transport processes are investigated. 3D sediment transport model developed using openFOAM has good agreement with experimental result and can be used to better understand effectiveness of tidal basin management.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160712009
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Talchabhadel Rocky
Nakagawa Hajime
Kawaike Kenji
spellingShingle Talchabhadel Rocky
Nakagawa Hajime
Kawaike Kenji
Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on Bangladesh
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Talchabhadel Rocky
Nakagawa Hajime
Kawaike Kenji
author_sort Talchabhadel Rocky
title Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on Bangladesh
title_short Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on Bangladesh
title_full Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on Bangladesh
title_fullStr Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Tidal River Management (TRM) and Tidal Basin Management (TBM): A case study on Bangladesh
title_sort tidal river management (trm) and tidal basin management (tbm): a case study on bangladesh
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Bangladesh is the biggest delta of the world. Construction of numbers of polders is one of the flood resilient approach. But the presence of coastal polders de-linked the flood plain. The siltation in river causes riverbeds to become higher than the adjacent crop lands, and vast area under the polders became permanently water logged rendering large tract of land uncultivable. The current practice is temporarily de-poldering by cutting embankment. This is a natural water management process with very little human interventions but it needs strong participation and consensus with a great deal of sacrifice by the stakeholders for a specific period (3 to 5 years or even more)[1]. An attempt has been made to study the phenomena of tidal basin management reviewing some secondary data and processes involved in successfully operated tidal basins of Bangladesh. And preliminary laboratory experiments are carried out to precisely look into the suspended sediment transport. With varying outflow discharge and sediment supply, the transport processes are investigated. 3D sediment transport model developed using openFOAM has good agreement with experimental result and can be used to better understand effectiveness of tidal basin management.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160712009
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AT nakagawahajime tidalrivermanagementtrmandtidalbasinmanagementtbmacasestudyonbangladesh
AT kawaikekenji tidalrivermanagementtrmandtidalbasinmanagementtbmacasestudyonbangladesh
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