India Revised Earthquake Design Code, 2025
Context: India has released a radically updated map under the revised Earthquake Design Code (2025), placing the entire Himalayan arc in a newly created highest-risk Zone VI for the first time.
About India Revised Earthquake Design Code, 2025:
What is the Seismic Zonation Map?
- A seismic zonation map classifies different regions of India based on their earthquake hazard potential, helping determine how strong structures must be to withstand earthquakes.
Published by:
- The updated map is issued by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) as part of the revised Earthquake Design Code, 2025 (IS 1893).
- It uses internationally accepted Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Assessment (PSHA)
Key Features of the Revised Zonation Map:
- Introduction of Highest-Risk Zone VI:
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- Entire Himalayan arc (J&K–Ladakh to Arunachal) placed in Zone VI, the most hazardous zone, for the first time.
- Recognises consistent, extreme tectonic stress along the Indian–Eurasian plate boundary.
- 61% of India Now in Moderate to High Hazard Zones:
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- A major jump from older estimates relying mainly on past epicentres.
- Reflects scientific modelling of fault segments, locked sections, and rupture potential.
- Boundary Towns Auto-Upgraded to Higher-Risk Zone:
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- If a city lies on the border of two zones, it defaults to the higher-risk one.
- Moves away from administrative lines to geological realities.
- Inclusion of Rupture Propagation Southward:
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- Acknowledges that Himalayan Frontal Thrust ruptures may extend south to populated foothill regions like Dehradun (near Mohand).
- Mandatory Structural & Non-Structural Safety:
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- New norms for anchoring parapets, ceilings, tanks, façades, HVAC units, etc., if their weight exceeds 1% of total load.
- Buildings near active faults must withstand pulse-like ground motions typical of near-fault quakes.
- New Soil & Ground-Response Requirements:
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- Detailed provisions for liquefaction, soil flexibility, site-specific shaking spectra.
- Encourages geotechnical investigations before major construction.
- Exposure Mapping (PEMA Method):
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- Incorporates population density, infrastructure concentration and socioeconomic vulnerability.
- Integrates impact-based assessment with geological hazard.
Significance:
- Improved Earthquake Preparedness: Accurate hazard modelling ensures stronger building codes for at-risk regions, especially the Himalayas.
- Retrofitting Imperative: Old structures, especially in Himalayan towns, must be retrofitted, including schools, hospitals, and bridges.
- Uniformity Across the Himalayan arc Fixes decades of underestimation due to inconsistent older maps (Zones IV & V), despite identical tectonics.
