Those short, heavy spells of rain will be called mini cloudbursts
▪ MUMBAI : Indian scientists have coined a new term to define incidents of heavy rain over short periods of time, a phenomena that is common during the monsoon in Mumbai, and which they say are expected to rise in the future.
Called mini cloudburst (MCB), the term was first used in 1999 by scientists CS Ramage and Thomas A Schroeder to study high rainfall at Mount Waialeale, in Hawaii’s Kauai — one of the world’s wettest spots. However, the two scientists did not quantify the amount of rainfall.
While rainfall exceeding 100 mm in an hour — a phenomena largely associated with cloud conditions in the Himalayan region and which leads to flash floods — has already been categorised as cloud burst events, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), so far there have been no categories to define intense, but short bursts of rain.
Now, based on the concept of the 1999 study, a four-member team from Pune’s Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), which is under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, and Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi has defined MCB as short-term but intense rainfall events characterised by 50mm rain or more in two consecutive hours. The IITM team also redefined cloudbursts as CBa (associated with high topography), CBb (more than 100mm in an hour), and MCB (more than 50mm in two consecutive hours). At present, rainfall of 50mm and above in two consecutive hours does not fall under the category of a cloudburst (CBb) even though the floods and damage it causes is similar.
The team’s findings assume significance because MCB events cause urban flooding in a city like Mumbai, and lead to loss of life and damage to property. The scientists also described the incessant downpour of September 20, 2017 — 304mm in just a day over Mumbai that grounded country’s financial capital — as a combination of MCB and CBb events.
The researchers said the rate of accumulation of water during a mini-cloud burst is three times more than in an extreme rainfall event — which the IMD calculates as 200mm in 24 hours — with three times more probability of flash floods. Experts said the prediction of MCBs can also be used to find solutions to flooding during flash floods.
“The work by the IITM scientists provides important insights on cloudburst and mini cloudburst events that can cause flash flooding in mountains and cities,” said Vimal Mishra, an associate professor, civil engineering, in the Indian Institute of Technology-Gandhinagar, who was not involved in the study. “The next step can be to find what the major driving factors of such events are, that cause loss of lives. In the future, the predictability of these events of such a short duration (1-2 hours) can be evaluated. This is essential to reduce damage.” “Along the west coast, MCB events occur when there is a combination of a strong offshore trough (elongated region of relatively low atmospheric pressure that affects weather) from south Gujarat to the Kerala coast, along with other weather systems from the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal,” said Nayana Deshpande, principal investigator, IITM. “Anthropogenic changes incr ease severity of such events. As existence of such events remains unclear in the meteorological community, we coined the term mini cloudburst.”