The Sunday Guardian

Andhra develops system to forecast lightning strikes

Of around a dozen forewarnin­gs issued by APSDMS in the last few days, 90% were proven right.

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bile lightning in Anantapur district’s Gummagatta village. The village witnessed the lighting strike, but people escaped the damage.

The APSDMS authoritie­s, which had developed the technology with the help of other associates, has made a presentati­on in the second week of May in a Cabinet meeting chaired by Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrabab­u Naidu, officials told The Sunday Guardian. The CM approved the funds meant for tie-up with Earth Networks and ISRO.

The CM suggested that the lightning informatio­n gathered from Earth Networks and ISRO could be shared with people in the affected areas through different media including electronic and social networks to minimise damage. APDMA officials have informed the Cabinet that they were in touch with the students of Kuppam engineerin­g college who had developed an App to alert the public on this. AP Deputy CM K. E. Krishna Murthy, who holds the revenue and relief ministry, told this newspaper on phone from Amaravati that the officials would be encouraged to extensivel­y utilise the lightning forewarnin­g technology and minimise damage.

“Once this app is fully developed, people in danger zones will be alerted t hrough t heir smartphone­s,” he said.

Presently, the authoritie­s set up 14 sensors in Kuppam, Anantapur, Kurnool, Kadapa, Srikakulam and Visakhapat­nam to predict lightning strikes and efforts are underway to set them up in another eight areas where there is high proba- bility of lightning disasters. APSDMS commission­er M.V. Seshagiri Babu said the sensors would be set up soon across the state.

As per this technology, the system can predict lightning with 90% accuracy within a radius of 2km.

Of around a dozen forewarnin­gs issued by the APSDMS in the last few days, 90% were proven right. Engineers working with the society said that they were even able to estimate the intensity of a lightning.

The sensors fixed on high rise towers in vulnerable areas capture the electromag­netic activity in clouds and feed the data to the control command set up of APSMDS near Amaravati. There the data is analysed and based on the scale of activity, warnings are issued to people in different areas.

APSDMS uses the general weather warning system of ISRO and the specific data provided by Earth Networks which has developed technology to measure incloud activity.

As per this system, lightning activity is divided into three categories. If it flashes 5 to 15 times in a minute, it is L 1, if it is 15 to25 times a minute, it is L 2 and if the flashes cross 25 times per minute, it is L3, which is very dangerous.

The Deputy CM told this newspaper that many other states in the country are showing interest in studying AP’s lightning forecast system.

“It is a fact that the country suffers a huge loss of human life and cattle every year becaus of lightning. Any advance warning can help minimise the loss,” he said.

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