Business Standard

Mumbai records 41° C, heat wave to continue

- ABHISHEK WAGHMARE

Mumbai recorded one of the highest-ever maximum temperatur­esin March at 41° C on Sunday. It was 8.2° C above the climatolog­ical normal maximum temperatur­e for March, 32.8° C. The presence of an anti-cyclone, or a high pressure area which pushes hot air downward towards the ground and lets it diverge on to surroundin­g areas, over Gujarat and Rajasthan heated up certain areas more than expected.

“Temperatur­es were appreciabl­y above normal today. This is a severe heat wave-like condition, and it would prevail for the next 24 hours,” K S Hosalikar, deputy director-general at Regional Meteorolog­ical Centre, Mumbai, said.

Heat waves due to anticyclon­es in north India are a regular phenomenon during the April-May period, as are cyclones in the Indian Ocean. Occurrence in March is very rare, but possible, according to meteorolog­ists.

The 2001-2010 period saw 98

heat waves across India, compared to 48, 45, 34 and 74 in the decades before, showing a marked increase in heat waves in the first decade of the 21st century. Around 4,620 deaths were reported in four years from 2013 to 2016. Meteorolog­ical researcher­s have, too, statistica­lly found a higher incidence of anti-cyclones in March in recent years, and some meteorolog­ists attribute this to climate change. Some states, including Gujarat and Odisha, have started

taking preventive actions.

In the current case of Mumbai, lower level (closer from ground) hot winds blew in a clockwise direction (which is the case for all anti-cyclones in the northern hemisphere) in a reverse C-shape path starting from Rajasthan and ending in Mumbai. “The sea breeze that normally sets in at 1 pm daily in summer set in at about 3 pm today (Sunday),” Hosalikar added. Hot easterlies delayed the incidence of sea breeze in Mumbai on Sunday.

Higher temperatur­es were recorded in the interiors according to data from a weather station network set up by private meteorolog­ical firm SkyMet all over Maharashtr­a. Places, including Thane, Panvel and Pen recorded close to 42-43° C, Skymet data showed. All-time maximum temperatur­e for Mumbai in March was on March 28, 1956, at 41.7° C, followed by 41.3° C on March 17, 2011.

 ??  ?? Mumbai (Santacruz) at 41° C: Third-highest maximum temperatur­e in March Mumbai (Colaba) at 38° C: 6.7° C above normal; heat waves in March are rare Highest March temperatur­e in Mumbai was recorded in 1956
Mumbai (Santacruz) at 41° C: Third-highest maximum temperatur­e in March Mumbai (Colaba) at 38° C: 6.7° C above normal; heat waves in March are rare Highest March temperatur­e in Mumbai was recorded in 1956

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