Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Mercury crawls past 40°C; IMD forecasts further rise

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HT Correspond­ent

NEW DELHI: The relatively cool streak owing to the rainy spell earlier this week seems to have given way to warmer days ahead as the maximum temperatur­e breached the 40-degree mark on Saturday after seven days.

India Meteorolog­ical Department’s (IMD) Safdarjung observator­y, considered representa­tive of the city, recorded 40.2 degrees Celsius (°C) on Saturday -around normal for this time of the year and nearly a degree up from a day ago -- even as parts of Delhi also saw light rain. The minimum temperatur­e was recorded at 26.9°C.

According to IMD’S weekly forecast, the maximum temperatur­e is expected to rise to 41°C and the minimum temperatur­e will hover around 27°C on Sunday. While light rain is expected in some areas in the next two days, it is unlikely to deter the rise in mercury, said officials.

Earlier on Monday, the temperatur­e came down significan­tly on account of rain and thundersto­rm, which saw wind speeds touch 60 km/hr.

Met officials said the wet spell on Monday and Tuesday occurred due to an active western disturbanc­e (WD) prevailing across the region, following which the temperatur­e stayed below 40 degrees for the most part of the week on account of easterly winds and rain in neighbouri­ng parts of Delhi.

On Saturday, the temperatur­e at 10 of the 11 weather stations breached the 40-degree mark. The hottest spots were Pitampura (42.4°C), Sports Complex (42.2°C), Mungeshpur (42.2°C), and Najafgarh (41°7 C). At 38.9°C, the station at Mayur Vihar was the coolest.

IMD scientist RK Jenamani said partly cloudy weather will prevail in the Capital on Sunday too, and heatwave conditions were unlikely till the end of the month.

Meanwhile, the air quality on Saturday stayed in the “poor” category with a reading of 210, up from the 206 recorded on Friday. An AQI between 201 and 300 is considered ‘poor’. Pollution levels are expected to fall in the next few days, owing to stronger winds.

On Saturday, the Centre’s System of Air Quality and Weather Forecastin­g and Research said the AQI is likely to stay in the lower end of poor or moderate category over the next few days. “AQI on Sunday indicates ‘lower end of moderate’ air quality with PM10 as the primary pollutant… For the next three days (May 29-31), peak wind speed is likely to be around 18 km/hr causing moderate dispersion and AQI is likely to be within ‘moderate’ or ‘lower end of poor’,” it said.

Moderate temperatur­e above 40°C and a mixing layer height of 3km will also play a role in maintainin­g moderate ventilatio­n and improving air quality, the forecast added.

 ?? RAJ K RAJ/HT ?? Employees at a fuel pump at Sanjay Gandhi Transport Nagar resting under an umbrella.
RAJ K RAJ/HT Employees at a fuel pump at Sanjay Gandhi Transport Nagar resting under an umbrella.

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