Hindustan Times (Patiala)

A rapidly spreading heatwave

A look at how mercury has soared across the expanse of the country, particular­ly across eastern India, as heatwaves gripped many states

- Srinivasa Rao Apparasu, Debabrata Mohanty and Joydeep Thakur letters@hindustant­imes.com

SWATHES OF DEEP RED ACROSS INDIA ALREADY

Temperatur­es have already soared past 43°C in several parts of the country. Particular­ly badly hit are regions in India’s east and southwest. According to IMD’s forecasts, max temperatur­es are set to rise by 2-3°C in the east and parts of south peninsular India over the coming weekend

43.8°C

Max temp recorded in Rajkot – the hottest across India on Wednesday, according to IMD

IMD: ‘SEVERE HEATWAVE’

A “severe heatwave” is likely over east India during the next 5 days and a heatwave will take hold over parts of south peninsular India over the next 3 days, IMD said in its forecast.

“Severe heatwave” conditions are likely in regions such Odisha (on Thursday and Friday) and West Bengal (Friday to Sunday). IMD said heatwave conditions will be there in Odisha, Bengal, Jharkhand, Gujarat, parts of north Konkan coast, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu among others.

HYDERABAD/BHUBANESWA­R/ KOLKATA: An intense heatwave has gripped parts of eastern coastal India, with temperatur­es crossing a scorching 45°C in Andhra Pradesh and hovering over 40°C at several places in Odisha and West Bengal.

Elections in these regions are still almost a month away, and local weather offices expect the punishing heatwave to continue during campaignin­g and voting.

The India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) had in early April predicted a higher number of extreme heatwave days between April and May in parts of the country, including the peninsula area and some parts of Central India.

In Andhra Pradesh, 46 revenue blocks witnessed severe heatwave conditions and 175 blocks saw heatwaves on Wednesday, according to the state disaster management authority. Markapuram in Prakasam district recorded a high of 44.7°C.

Andhra’s disaster management authority runs its own monitoring stations, which are separate from the IMD’s.

Other hotspots included Kovilam in Srikakulam at 45.4°C, Tummakapal­le in Vizianagar­am at 45.1°C, and Ravikamata­m in Anakapalle at 45.1°C. Most of Andhra Pradesh saw maximum temperatur­es above 40C (104F).

In neighbouri­ng Telangana, over 20 places recorded temperatur­es above 44°C, with Nidamanur in Nalgonda district hitting 44.8°C.

The Telangana state developmen­t and planning society predicted highs around 44°C in several areas over the next three days, with largely dry weather across the state.

Odisha ordered school closures from Thursday for three days, as at least 30 places recorded temperatur­es of 40°C or more. On Wednesday, Talcher was the state’s hottest at 43.2°C.

“We are preparing to face minimum voter inconvenie­nce. We’ll have ambulances and mobile health units with ORS packets,” said Nikunja Dhal, Odisha’s chief electoral officer.

The Special Relief Commission­er has asked district collectors to not allow labourers to work between 11am and 3pm, warning of punitive action against people who violate the order.

In West Bengal, several south Bengal districts sweltered, with Panagarh in West Burdwan recording 42.8C (109F), the state’s highest on Tuesday, which was eight degrees above the normal.

The India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) warned more south Bengal districts could face heatwaves in the next 3-4 days.

Several other weather stations in the districts, such as Bankura, Sriniketan, Kalaikunda, Burdwan, Asansol, Purulia, Barrackpor­e and Suri, recorded temperatur­e above the 40 degrees Celsius mark, officials said.

In Kolkata, day temperatur­e recorded was 39.4 degrees Celsius, 3.8 degrees above normal. However, in places such as Salt Lake and Dum Dum Salt Lake crossed the 40 degrees Celsius mark.

The IMD predicted heatwaves in parts of Odisha, Gangetic West Bengal, and Jharkhand from April 17-21, with severe heatwaves likely in isolated Odisha and Gangetic West Bengal pockets from April 18-21.

It issued orange alerts for Odisha, Saurashtra and West Bengal, cautioning people that while moderate temperatur­e and heat is tolerable for the general public, some health concern is likely for vulnerable people, such as infants, elderly and people with chronic diseases.

It also issued a yellow alert for Jharkhand, north Konkan, Madhya Maharashtr­a, Marathwada, Coastal Andhra Pradesh and Yanam, Rayalaseem­a, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Puducherry & Karaikal, asking people to be on the watch for high heat exposure and take necessary precaution­s.

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 ?? ANI ?? A woman covers herself and her child with a cloth from the sun on a hot summer day, at Red Fort, in New Delhi on Wednesday.
ANI A woman covers herself and her child with a cloth from the sun on a hot summer day, at Red Fort, in New Delhi on Wednesday.

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