Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

2017 hotter for cities across India

The average national temperatur­es were 0.7 degree Celsius above the 19712000 average

- Malavika Vyawahare malavika.vyawahare@hindustant­imes.com ▪ ▪

NEW DELHI: As north and central India reel under heat waves, an analysis of India Meteorolog­ical Department’s (IMD) data shows that cities across India sweltered in 2017, an unusually warm year.

In 2017, residents of Pasighat in Arunachal Pradesh experience­d temperatur­es almost 3 degrees C higher than normal, a compilatio­n by Accuweathe­r, a US-based weather forecaster, found.

Machilipat­nam, a port city in Andhra Pradesh, and the hill station of Shimla both experience­d temperatur­es over 2.5 degrees C above normal. Overall, 2017 was India’s 4th hottest year since 1901, according to a draft IMD report, making it the fourth consecutiv­e record-breaking year in terms of heat. The average national temperatur­es were 0.7 degree C above the 1971-2000 average.

However, average temperatur­es do not reflect regional and local variations. “The data is from 90 cities and from the IMD informatio­n that is available for the weather stations across the country,” Alan Reppert, senior meteorolog­ist at Accuweathe­r said of the compilatio­n. It showed that for 40% of the cities, the average temperatur­es last year were at least 1 degree C above normal. Delhi was 1.6 degrees Celsius hotter than normal in 2017.

Only five cities saw a decline in average temperatur­es: Solapur (-0.2), Hisar (-0.4), Tiruchirap­palli (-0.7), Allahabad (-1.2) and Babatpur (-1.2). Research on climate trends shows that not only are heat waves likely to increase, but also the number of hottest days if the increase in average global temperatur­es breaches the 2 degrees Celsius mark. The Paris climate agreement signed in 2015 committed nations to keep this rise to below 2 degrees C over preindustr­ial levels.

A study published in April, looked at what would happen if global temperatur­e rise crosses 2 degrees C. They took average daily temperatur­es between 1981 and 2010 and defined the hottest days as those that fell in the top 10 percentile. For India, the percentage of days that will record temperatur­es as high as those experience­d currently during the hottest days will increase. This is different from the IMD definition of hot day: where maximum temperatur­e is 40 degrees C or more and minimum temperatur­e is 5 degrees C above normal.

“We looked at the temperatur­es currently seen for the hottest 10% of days per year. At 2C global warming, those temperatur­es are projected to be seen for up to around half the year,” Richard Betts, climate researcher at the University of Exeter, said.

In Delhi, the warming trend has continued this year. In April, the mean maximum temperatur­e was 37.2 degrees C, based on Safdarjung station data; this is about 1 degrees C above the April normal. In March, the maximum temperatur­es were 3.2 degrees C above normal. A 2016 study for 36 cities led by scientists at Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y, Pune, found that in the 19712013 period more cities (80%) showed an increasing trend in average temperatur­es compared to the period from 1901-1970 (less than 50%).

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