Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

More rain in store as 44 killed in UP

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

LUCKNOW:At least 44 people were killed in incidents of flooding, roof, wall collapses and lightning strikes as incessant rain battered various districts of UP since Thursday morning, a state government spokesman said on Friday

He said six deaths each were reported in Rae Bareli and Pratapgarh, five in Amethi, four each in Varanasi and Chandauli, three each in Barabanki, Prayagraj, Mahoba, two in Ambedkar Nagar, and one each in Kanpur Nagar, Gorakhpur, Sonbhadra, Ayodhya, Saharanpur, Jaunpur, Kaushambi and Azamgarh.

“Lucknow recorded 115 mm rainfall till Friday evening. And more rain was in store,” warned the weathermen.

The Meteorolog­ical Centre, Lucknow has issued a ‘heavy rainfall’ warning for several parts of Uttar Pradesh. Heavy rainfall is likely to occur in Chitrakoot, Prayagraj, Sombhadra, Mirzapur, Chandauli, Varanasi, Kaushambi, Pratapgarh, Sultapur, Ghazipur, Jaunpur, Azamgarh, Balia, Mau, Deoria, Gorakhpur, Ambedkar Nagar and adjoining districts during the next 48 hours. The warning is valid till 8.30 am of September 29.

On Friday, the maximum and minimum temperatur­es in Lucknow were 25.1°C and 23 degree Celsius. The forecast for Lucknow and adjoining areas is generally cloudy sky with few spells of rain, thunder showers. Maximum and minimum temperatur­e would be around 27 and 23 degrees Celsius, respective­ly.

LUCKNOW : Extreme weather conditions are the new ‘normal’ these days and the ongoing extreme rainfall is taking place in only some regions, while many others are having deficient rainfall, said Venkatesh Dutta, river expert and associate professor, Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University (BBAU) here on Friday.

The state capital and several parts of Uttar Pradesh experience­d heavy rainfall during the last 48 hours. Yet several districts in the state are facing rain deficit, he said.

According to the IMD website, Ghaziabad is driest district in UP with 73% rain deficit, Meerut recorded rain deficit of 34%, Agra 18%, Varanasi 17%, Kanpur 12% and Gorakhpur 9%.

The website mentioned that Balrampur was the wettest district with 41% surplus rainfall.

Dutta said, “Monsoon withdrawal has been delayed this year. Normally monsoon begins to retreat by the first week of September, but this year it may go up to first week of October. The extended monsoon has broken its 60-year-record as per IMD data. The impact is more visible because we have encroached upon water bodies and natural drainage system.”

“The extreme events remind us about the river land that we have encroached,” he said.

Saroj Chattree, geography teacher at La Martiniere Girls’ College, Lucknow said, “Monsoons are seasonal winds that reverse their direction with the change of seasons. All winds blow from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure. However, due to global warming, this cycle is disturbed.”

“Hence monsoons, which are said to be erratic, become more unpredicta­ble. Therefore, we had deficient rainfall in July-August, the peak monsoon period. Monsoon normally retreats by September 30, but due to a low pressure trough formed from eastern Maharashtr­a to eastern UP there are heavy rains in this region,” Chattree said.

An official of the Meteorolog­ical Centre, Lucknow said a cyclonic circulatio­n

was lying over south-west Uttar Pradesh and its neighbourh­ood.

Subsequent­ly, an east-west trough in the lower levels is likely to develop over the Indo-Gangetic plains during next the two days. A low pressure area is likely to form over north Bay of Bengal and it neighbourh­ood by Saturday, which could become more marked subsequent­ly, thus leading to more rainfall, he said.

“Moisture incursion and strong convergenc­e in the easterly wind is likely to cause fairly widespread to widespread rainfall with isolated, heavy to very heavy and extremely heavy rainfall likely over Bihar during the next 3 days and heavy to very heavy rainfall over sub-Himalayan West Bengal and Sikkim, Uttarakhan­d and Himachal Pradesh during the next 3-4 days,” said JP Gupta, met director, Lucknow.

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