Questions raised about the cityâs viability as Manufacturing units have been badly affected [View in browser]( [See all newsletters]( 07 December 2023 Chennai limps back to normalcy, but with dented image [A drone visual shows an area that is flooded after the landfall of Cyclone Michaung in Chennai on Wednesday. The overwhelmed city resembled a huge lake dotted with islands] Â Chennai is slowly limping back to normalcy after being hit by Cyclone Michaung, but not without some bruises on its image. Between December 2 and 5, the two city observatories, at Nungambakkam and Meenambakkam received half a metre of rain each, much more than the devastating double-spells of November and December 2015. For a day, the overwhelmed city resembled a huge lake dotted with islands, the waters of the Adyar river kissing the bridge above it, but by the evening of Wednesday, floods had receded in most parts of the cityâthough not all. For example, the busy Sivasamy Salai in Mylapore, which houses the famous Vivekananda College, is practically out of bounds with flood waters and fallen trees. An elderly resident who had shifted to a higher floor told businessline, that when he went to his ground floor to pick up some stuff, he found the refrigerator floating in water, lengthwise. - Also read: [Cyclone Michaung, record downpour cripple MSMEs in Chennai industrial estates]( Surging hotel tariffs Budget hotels and serviced apartments are besieged by Chennaiites with flooded homes, and room tariffs have risen in sympathy. For instance, The Kingâs Park, a small hotel with 32 rooms in Chepauk, is full; many of its occupants are from far-off places in the city, as they couldnât find rooms in their neighbourhood. As Swiggy and Zomato delivery boys mount their motorcycles, as autorickshaws begin to temper the unconscionable rates they charged during the rain, as a skeletal public service trundles down the wet roads carrying office-goers returning to work, and as some supermarkets roll up their shutters, the spotlight shifts on to the physical and figurative bruises the city has sustained. - Also read: [Cyclone Michaung may shrink Indiaâs 2023-24 red chilli crop]( Manufacturing units hit Manufacturing units have been badly affectedâit will take them days to return to normalcy. Padi, an auto component manufacturing hub and home to many TVS Group companies, is heavily waterlogged. Machines are under water, and the damage done will be assessed after the water is pumped out. âThe situation is far worse than we anticipated; we are assessing the damage and hope to be up and running by this weekend,â Arathi Krishna, Managing Director, Sundram Fasteners, told businessline. The situation is not much different in the nearby Ambattur industrial estate, home to several MSMEs. The situation is not as bad for large companies, especially MNCs in IT, ITeS, and GCC sectors, but that is only because these companies have multi-layered âbusiness continuity plansâ, many of which incorporate the lessons learnt in the 2015 floods. The Global Capability Center of a large European bank, for instance, had moved all the critical operations to higher floors, made stay-back arrangements for employees (bedding, kitchen), provided employees with higher-capacity UPS that could out-stay a power outage, and even bought an inflatable dinghy. The BCPs include redundancies in other cities to take over in case one city is crippled. - Also read:[With power, Net services down, WFH not an option for many in Chennai]( Question of viability Yet, Chennaiâs lure as a destination for IT/ITeS/GCC operations has not gone unquestioned. âWith no power, no internet, and no cellular service, WFH was not possible. This raises a question of Chennaiâs viability as an ITeS/IT/GCC hub,â said Gopal Srinivasan, Chairman, TVS Capital Funds, on X. Some others whom businessline spoke with (and requested not to be named) agreed with Srinivasan, saying that while the city may have been overwhelmed by the downpour, better planning could have easily ensured no disruptions to communications. The government could have told the cell tower operators to keep a 72-hour power backup ready, one source said. 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