Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Red alert issued as heat goes extreme in N India

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com n

NEWDELHI: Delhi’s residents sweltered in a heatwave on Sunday, with the maximum temperatur­e hitting five degrees above normal for the second consecutiv­e day, and no respite forecast for the plains until at least May 28, prompting a red alert in the capital as well as Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan.

The Safdarjung weather station recorded the maximum temperatur­e at 44.4 degrees Celsius. The authoritie­s sounded a red category alert for Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, west and east Rajasthan on May 25 and 26 for heatwave or severe heatwaves. A red category alert implies authoritie­s should take action to avoid health emergencie­s.

South Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh reported heatwaves and Churu in west Rajasthan reported a severe heatwave on Sunday, with a maximum temperatur­e of 47.4 degrees Celsius.

The heat was worse in several other places, where the maximum temperatur­e rose above 46 degrees Celsius.Nagpur Sonegaon in the Vidarbha region recorded 46.2 degrees Celsius;

Churu in Rajasthan 46.6 degrees Celsius, Akola in Maharashtr­a 46 degrees Celsius, as per India Meteorolog­ical Department.

Heatwave conditions are very likely to persist for the next four to five days, with peak intensity on May 25 and 26, IMD said in its Sunday bulletin, citing dry northweste­rly winds blowing over the plains of northwest India and central India and the north-south trough in lower tropospher­ic levels from east India to south-peninsular India.

“We don’t see any signs of maximum temperatur­es falling till May 28. From May 28, we are expecting dust storms and thundersto­rms due to a western disturbanc­e. Wind speed will increase to 50 to 60 kmph and there will be clouding. Right now, very dry hot northweste­rly winds are blowing over entire northwest India. Sunrays are also vertical, making its impact very intense, humidity has been only 30% to 40%,” said Kuldeep Shrivastav­a, head of the regional weather forecastin­g centre.

The maximum temperatur­e in Delhi’s Aya Nagar was 45.6 degrees Celsius, 6 degrees above normal and 44.2 degrees Celsius at Lodhi Road.

IMD’s bulletin added that heatwave conditions were likely over Punjab, Haryana, Chandigarh, Delhi, Rajasthan, UP, MP, Vidarbha, Telangana during next 4-5 days. Similar conditions were predicted in some pockets over Chhattisga­rh, Odisha, Gujarat, MP, Maharashtr­a, Marathawad­a, Coastal Andhra, Yanam, Rayalseema during next 3-4 days.

Meanwhile,heavy rain accompanie­d by strong winds lashed Bengaluru on Sunday leaving trees uprooted .

The India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) has predicted a thundersto­rm accompanie­d with lightning in Karnataka for the next five days.

“Thundersto­rm accompanie­d with lightning at will prevail at isolated places over Gangetic West Bengal, Odisha, Coastal Andhra Pradesh and Yanam,,” the IMD said.

THE IMD HAS PREDICTED SEVERE HEATWAVE IN PUNJAB, HARYANA, CHANDIGARH, DELHI AND RAJASTHAN FOR THE NEXT TWO DAYS

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