Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Rain brings mercury down in Delhi-ncr, more to follow

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEW DELHI: Rain and thundersto­rms on Sunday morning brought relief to residents of Delhi and its satellite towns in the national capital region (NCR) from heat and humidity, and weather scientists predicted more wet weather over the coming days.

Several weather stations in Delhi experience­d moderate category rains with Safdarjung receiving 34.8 mm, Lodhi Road 38.2 mm and Delhi Ridge 46.6 mm, according to the Regional Weather Forecastin­g Centre (RWFC) of the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD).

Delhi-ncr will receive more rains over the next three to four days as a monsoon trough is passing very close to the national capital, IMD scientists said.

“There is a lot of moisture because of easterly winds and there was intense heating for the last three to four days with maximum temperatur­es of over 40 degrees C. We are expecting some thundersto­rm activity and light rain for a few days,” said Kuldeep

Shrivastav­a, head of RWFC.

Delhi’s maximum temperatur­e on Sunday was 34.4 degrees Celsius, two degrees below normal. Haryana, Chandigarh and Delhi received 7% deficient rains in the week from June 24 to July 1. The monsoon arrived in Delhi on June 24, three days in advance.

There is also a low-pressure area over Kutch and its neighbourh­ood; widespread rainfall activity is likely over Gujarat during the next three days. Very heavy to extremely heavy rain is also likely over Saurashtra and Kutch during the next two days.

Under the influence of a lowpressur­e area over northwest Bay of Bengal off the Odishagang­etic West Bengal coasts and associated cyclonic circulatio­ns, fairly widespread to widespread and very heavy rain is likely over Odisha, West Bengal, Jharkhand and Bihar during next two-three days, IMD said in its Sunday bulletin. Widespread and heavy rains are also expected in many parts of central and northwest India during the next four to five days. IMD’S bulletin has cautioned that moderate to intense thundersto­rm and lightning strikes are very likely over Saurashtra and Kutch, south Gujarat region, east Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, east Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisga­rh, Gangetic West Bengal, Odisha and Jharkhand during the next 12 hours. HT reported on Sunday that since May 15, nearly 315 people in Bihar and UP lost their lives to electrocut­ion from lightning strikes.

IMD scientists said intense rains in June led to more farmers being out in the field planting paddy.

“This year the number of lightning incidents and lightning deaths is more frequent over Bihar and eastern UP because the region is seeing intense monsoon rain quite early in the monsoon in June. In previous years this region usually didn’t receive such rains in June. Because of good rainfall this year in June, farmers are out in the field farming. Paddy field water also attracts electricit­y and farmers on the field act as conductors of electricit­y from the thundersto­rm,” said Sunitha Devi, a member of the Ministry of Earth Sciences’ thundersto­rm working group, had said on Saturday.

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