<p>Chennai: Volunteers waded through stagnant water to hand out food and supplies, and some manufacturing plants remained shut in tech-and-auto hub district of Chennai on Friday, four days after cyclone Michaung lashed the coast.</p>.<p>At least 14 people, most of them in Chennai and its state of Tamil Nadu, have died in the flooding, triggered by torrential rains that started on Monday.</p>.<p>The cyclone itself made landfall further north in Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday afternoon.</p>.<p>Authorities said some low-lying areas of the state were still inundated and government officials and volunteers were taking supplies to people stuck in their homes in slums and other areas.</p>.Centre nod to set up urban flood mitigation project in Chennai.<p>The larger Chennai area is home to the Indian units of several global firms including Hyundai Motor, Daimler and Apple's Taiwanese suppliers Foxconn and Pegatron.</p>.<p>While many of them including Pegatron and Foxconn resumed operations within a day or two of the cyclone making landfall, some plants of the TVS group located in the worst-affected areas are yet to open, industry sources said.</p>.<p>Information technology (IT) services providers in the city announced work-from-home policies for the week, while schools and colleges closed. A few schools and colleges were converted into temporary shelters.</p>.<p>This week's floods in Chennai brought back memories of the extensive damage caused by floods eight years ago which killed around 290 people.</p>.<p>In Andhra Pradesh, the damage from the cyclone was relatively contained, with roads damaged and trees uprooted as big waves crashed into the coast.</p>.<p>Defence Minister Rajnath Singh visited Chennai on Thursday and announced New Delhi will release a second instalment of 4.5 billion rupees ($54 million) to Tamil Nadu to help manage the damage. The federal government has also approved a 5.6 billion-rupee project for flood management in Chennai, he said.</p>.<p>Chennai residents questioned the ability of the city's infrastructure to handle extreme weather.</p>.<p>"Not only has urbanisation itself caused a problem, but the nature of the urbanisation has preyed upon open spaces, holding areas like marshlands and flood plains," social activist Nityanand Jayaraman said.</p>.<p>Experts have, however, said better stormwater drainage systems would not have been able to prevent the flooding caused by very heavy and extremely heavy rains.</p>.<p>"This solution would have helped a lot in moderate and heavy rainfall, but not in very heavy and extremely heavy rains," Raj Bhagat P, a civil engineer and geo-analytics expert, said on Wednesday. </p>
<p>Chennai: Volunteers waded through stagnant water to hand out food and supplies, and some manufacturing plants remained shut in tech-and-auto hub district of Chennai on Friday, four days after cyclone Michaung lashed the coast.</p>.<p>At least 14 people, most of them in Chennai and its state of Tamil Nadu, have died in the flooding, triggered by torrential rains that started on Monday.</p>.<p>The cyclone itself made landfall further north in Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday afternoon.</p>.<p>Authorities said some low-lying areas of the state were still inundated and government officials and volunteers were taking supplies to people stuck in their homes in slums and other areas.</p>.Centre nod to set up urban flood mitigation project in Chennai.<p>The larger Chennai area is home to the Indian units of several global firms including Hyundai Motor, Daimler and Apple's Taiwanese suppliers Foxconn and Pegatron.</p>.<p>While many of them including Pegatron and Foxconn resumed operations within a day or two of the cyclone making landfall, some plants of the TVS group located in the worst-affected areas are yet to open, industry sources said.</p>.<p>Information technology (IT) services providers in the city announced work-from-home policies for the week, while schools and colleges closed. A few schools and colleges were converted into temporary shelters.</p>.<p>This week's floods in Chennai brought back memories of the extensive damage caused by floods eight years ago which killed around 290 people.</p>.<p>In Andhra Pradesh, the damage from the cyclone was relatively contained, with roads damaged and trees uprooted as big waves crashed into the coast.</p>.<p>Defence Minister Rajnath Singh visited Chennai on Thursday and announced New Delhi will release a second instalment of 4.5 billion rupees ($54 million) to Tamil Nadu to help manage the damage. The federal government has also approved a 5.6 billion-rupee project for flood management in Chennai, he said.</p>.<p>Chennai residents questioned the ability of the city's infrastructure to handle extreme weather.</p>.<p>"Not only has urbanisation itself caused a problem, but the nature of the urbanisation has preyed upon open spaces, holding areas like marshlands and flood plains," social activist Nityanand Jayaraman said.</p>.<p>Experts have, however, said better stormwater drainage systems would not have been able to prevent the flooding caused by very heavy and extremely heavy rains.</p>.<p>"This solution would have helped a lot in moderate and heavy rainfall, but not in very heavy and extremely heavy rains," Raj Bhagat P, a civil engineer and geo-analytics expert, said on Wednesday. </p>