A severe flash flood, triggered by a localized heavy rainfall spell and a subsequent under-construction retaining wall collapse, caused extensive devastation at the 405 MW Panyor Lower Hydroelectric Project (PLHEP) site in the Keyi Panyor district of Arunachal Pradesh on June 24, 2026. The disaster, which occurred around 6:00 AM in the Poosa–Yazali area, directly hit the 43 Colony of the North Eastern Electric Power Corporation Limited (NEEPCO), located near the confluence of an unnamed tributary and the reservoir's backwater zone.
According to a comprehensive analysis published by the advocacy group South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People (SANDRP), the deluge resulted in at least one confirmed female fatality, identified as 35-year-old Nirmala Gupta, while four others remain missing and 17 people sustained injuries. Initial estimates suggest that nearly 40 percent of the NEEPCO colony town was washed away or heavily compromised, with 18 residential quarters destroyed and vital infrastructure, including the NEEPCO helipad and multiple stretches of National Highway-13, severely damaged or blocked by subsequent landslides.
In response to the catastrophe, NEEPCO temporarily shut down power generation at the PLHEP as a precautionary measure, opening a spillway gate by 1.5 meters to release approximately 230.83 cumecs of water. This sudden surge prompted high-alert advisories in downstream districts of neighboring Assam, including Dhemaji, Lakhimpur, Biswanath, Sonitpur, and Dhubri, over fears of rapidly rising river levels.
Meanwhile, rescue operations were spear-headed by the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) and local police, who managed to rescue several stranded individuals, though persistent roadblocks on both the Yazali and Hoj–Potin sides severely hampered access for emergency teams like the NDRF, which remained on standby.
The incident has drawn sharp criticism from SANDRP, which highlights deep institutional failures in disaster forecasting, monitoring, and communication across central and state bodies. The analysis reveals that neither the India Meteorological Department's (IMD) 24-hour Flash Flood Risks Outlook nor the Central Water Commission's (CWC) Daily Flood Situation Reports issued on the morning of the disaster anticipated the localized severity in Keyi Panyor, despite broader regional heavy rainfall alerts.
Furthermore, a glaring bureaucratic gap was exposed regarding the IMD's monitoring capabilities: although Keyi Panyor was officially carved out as Arunachal Pradesh's 26th district in March 2024, the IMD’s reporting framework still only tracks 16 of the state's now 28 districts, meaning no localized automatic rain-gauge or weather data was separated for the disaster zone.
The CWC’s existing monitoring systems also proved ineffective for this type of event. The commission maintains just a single monitoring station at Yazali along the 150-kilometer-long Panyor River. Because this gauge is located roughly 40 kilometers upstream of the actual PLHEP dam, it recorded completely normal flood levels during the disaster, showcasing a critical vulnerability in the network's ability to capture sudden, highly localized catchment events or cloudbursts.
State-level emergency public communications were similarly delayed, with Keyi Panyor district’s official social media channels completely un-updated since late May, leaving the state's residents reliant on lagging updates from the main Department of Disaster Management.
Beyond technical monitoring gaps, the SANDRP report raises uncomfortable questions regarding NEEPCO’s own risk management, land-use planning, and structural safeguards. Preliminary analysis of satellite imagery indicates that the 43 Colony and its associated facilities were constructed directly within a naturally flood-prone terrain, reducing the stream's natural floodplain and leaving it exposed during intense weather.
SANDRP points out that the rapid collapse of the under-construction retaining wall—which allowed a mountain of water and debris to instantly submerge low-lying residential areas—calls into question NEEPCO's fundamental capacity to secure its own residential infrastructure, let alone manage highly sensitive, large-scale hydropower assets in a fragile Himalayan terrain. Criticizing the lack of a basin-wide
Early Warning System (EWS) and transparency from the project authorities, the network has called for an immediate, independent investigation into the disaster’s engineering and ecological causes, demanding that the findings be made fully public to prevent future failures from threatening vulnerable upstream and downstream communities alike.

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