Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

SPRING TEMPERATUR­ES

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even earlier in February,” said Mahesh Palawat, vice president, climate change and meteorolog­y at Skymet Weather, a private weather forecaster.

Among the stark temperatur­es recorded was the 40°C in Bhuj on Wednesday, some 10 degrees higher than normal. On Thursday, such a high departure from normal was recorded in Bikaner in Rajasthan, where the maximum was 36.8°C. In J&K, the deviations were 7-9 degrees above normal. The Capital recorded a maximum temperatur­e of 29.8°C, 6 degrees above normal.

In addition to the increased risk of forest fires and rapid glacier melt, such unusual temperatur­es could have a significan­t economic impact: winter crops may need to be harvested sooner than normal, and the warm, dry conditions could leave irrigation reservoirs depleted.

Palawat said at fault is a climatic phenomenon known as an anti-cyclone that has formed over the northeast Arabian Sea, sending dry and hot winds from Sindh and Balochista­n westwards, over parts of India.

“The temperatur­es are also high in the hill regions but that is also because very feeble western disturbanc­es are not bringing adequate rain and snow to the Western Himalayan region,” Palawat added.

A western disturbanc­e, or WD, is the incursion of moisture laden winds that originate in the Mediterran­ean region – these usually bring rain to the plans in the northwest and snow to the Himalayas, which help create cool winds.

“In November and December there were hardly any WDs so the hills remained mostly dry, in January we saw some good weather activity due to strong WDs but February has again been dry and warm,” he added.

A second expert explained that the lack of cloud-drawing WDs means the plains get more sunshine, absorbing more energy and, thus, becoming hotter – a phenomenon known as solar insolation. “We are keeping a close watch on Gujarat and Saurashtra. Last year also in spring months we saw that the impact of WDs was less leading to higher solar insolation over the plains,” said Naresh Kumar, senior scientist at India Meteorolog­ical Department.

He added that the anticyclon­e has meant that the winds blowing over these states are coming from the plains, blocking out the usual sea breeze from the Arabian Sea that has a cooling effect. “This is why maximum temperatur­es have increased quite a bit over the western region. There is a rising trend in temperatur­es over the northweste­rn plains also now,” he added.

A third expert said the spike in heat could be transitory, but admitted that the patterns are noteworthy. “Every spring, anticyclon­es form over the western region and over Bay of Bengal but this time the anti-cyclone over Arabian Sea has formed early, bringing dry, warm air. The soil is also dry, so there is a positive feedback mechanism making temperatur­es spike over many parts of the country. Hopefully this phase will end soon and temperatur­es will fall once again,” said M Rajeevan, former secretary, ministry of earth sciences.

What is different this year is

AMONG THE STARK TEMPERATUR­ES RECORDED WAS THE 40°C IN BHUJ ON WEDNESDAY, SOME 10 DEGREES HIGHER THAN NORMAL; IN JAMMU AND KASHMIR, THE DEVIATIONS WERE 7-9 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL

the prediction that El Nino conditions will take hold in the global weather. “This year being a transition year to El Nino conditions, India should be fully prepared for an increase in severity and frequency of heat waves. The preparatio­ns should have started by now,” he said.

HT reported on February 10 that early data shows a high probabilit­y of the El Nino climate pattern this year, prompting experts to warn of a potentiall­y warmer summer, although they admit that it’s premature to assess its impact on the annual monsoon rains. El Nino is characteri­sed by an unusual warming of waters in the eastern equatorial Pacific; its opposite, La Nina is characteri­sed by unusually cooler waters in the same area. Together, the phenomenon is called the ENSO (El Nino Southern Oscillatio­n), and it has a high correlatio­n with warmer summers and weaker monsoon rains in India.

officer, said that he received the call from the fire brigade control room as he was speaking to Rahangdale.

Puneet Asar, owner of one of the showrooms in the mill said, “We were shutting our shops and leaving when we heard about the fire and evacuated immediatel­y. All showrooms have firefighti­ng equipment here.”

Another citizen who works in

office nearby said the fire started from an air conditione­r in an office on the third floor, which spread to a restaurant on the second floor. Twelve fire engines, six jumbo tankers and other emergency vehicles were also dispatched for the operation.

When a fire broke out at Raghuvansh­i Mills on June 25, 2020, it took fire brigade more than 23 hours to bring it under control. Rahangdale was the fire chief at the time.

LOWER PAREL FIRE

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