Flooding

A participant in a “Gross Gathering” organized by the Center for Neighborhood Technology (CNT) in Chatham, a neighborhood on the south side of Chicago. Photo by CNT.
Flooding is maybe the most obvious manifestation of the destructive power of water. Large floods can change history, and even localized floods can do significant damage to the people and communities affected. And floods are getting worse: climate change is increasing the intensity of rain events and hurricanes; development patterns are putting more people in harm’s way; and increasing imperviousness in our cities means more stormwater runoff.
But floods can also bring many benefits to ecosystems and the human communities that depend on them. We need to learn to live better with water in order to gain these benefits while minimizing the risk of damage.
The solutions have to happen at various scales: small bioswales to absorb urban stormwater; setback levees to give rivers room to flood; insurance and planning systems that encourage people to live in safer areas.
Resources to Understand Flooding
For an overview of flooding and flood management (especially on large rivers), see Chapter 7.
For urban stormwater flooding, see Chapter 15.
For flood-related photos, visit the Photo Gallery.
Flooding in the News
Green Stormwater Infrastructure in Louisiana
April 2025: “Fighting Louisiana Floodwaters With Patches of Green,” New York Times (gift link) Bioswales and other green stormwater infrastructure can provide multiple benefits, including flood mitigation, water-quality improvement, heat mitigation, and groundwater...
Environmental Flows and the Belo Monte Dam
April 2025: “On a Dammed River, Amazon Villagers Fight to Restore the Flow,” Yale E360. The construction of the Belo Monte Dam on the Xingu River has devastated the ecology and indigenous communities of the “Volta Grande” (Big Bend); those communities are trying to...