Hindustan Times (Noida)

Minimum temperatur­e dips to 2°C as cold spell persists

- HT Correspond­ent htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Delhi woke up to a shivering, foggy and polluted morning on Thursday with the mercury falling down to 2 degrees Celsius, five below the season’s normal, and the air entering the “severe” zone.

On Thursday, the minimum temperatur­e at the Safdarjung observator­y, considered the official marker for the city, was 2°C. The maximum temperatur­e was 19.2°C, one degree below what is considered to be normal for this time of the year. At the Palam and Lodhi Road weather stations, the minimum temperatur­es were 4.9°C and 2.4°C respective­ly.

According to the regional weather forecastin­g centre of the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD), severe cold wave conditions will continue in Delhi till January 18. It has forecast a respite after that due to a change in wind direction.

Meanwhile, as cold wave conditions continued in the city, the air quality continued to deteriorat­e on Thursday, with the overall air quality index (AQI) in Delhi touching 429, in the “severe” zone, according to the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB). This is the third time in the last fortnight that the AQI in Delhi had crossed the “severe” mark.

Union ministry of earth science’s air quality monitoring centre warned that the coming week could be the “first extended extreme air pollution event for 2021”.

Severe cold conditions are likely to continue over Delhi till January 18. KULDEEP SRIVASTAVA, India Meteorolog­ical Department

NEW DELHI: Temperatur­es plummeted and air pollution shot up in the national capital on Thursday when the morning was as cold as 2°C and the 24-hour average air quality index rose to 429 – conditions that are unlikely to improve till early next week, weather scientists said.

The city is in the grip of its second cold wave of the winter, brought on by icy winds from the Himalayan range that are now affecting large parts of the country’s north and northwest.

“Severe cold conditions are likely to continue over Delhi till January 18. After that, the wind direction will change from north-westerly to easterly. Simply put, at present Delhi is receiving icy cold winds from the snow-clad states of Jammu and Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh but after January 18, winds will start coming in from the landlocked states and there will be some respite,” said Kuldeep Srivastava, head of India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD)’S regional weather forecastin­g centre.

The minimum temperatur­e at the Safdarjung observator­y, which is considered the official marker for Delhi’s weather, was 2°C. The maximum was 19.2°C, a degree below what is considered to be normal for this time of the year.

At the Palam and Lodhi Road weather stations, the minimum temperatur­es were 4.9°C and 2.4°C respective­ly.

This is the second time this season that Delhi residents are experienci­ng a sharp drop in temperatur­es. The last cold spell occurred around the end of 2020 when the minimum temperatur­e on New Year’s Day dropped to 1.1°C – the lowest recorded in 14 years.

IMD scientists said the minimum temperatur­e is likely to rise, but only marginally, on Friday. It will fall again from Saturday.

The fall in temperatur­es has also coincided with a slowing of wind speeds, trapping pollutants in the air. The AQI shot up to 429 from 354 on Wednesday.

This is the third time in the last fortnight that the AQI in Delhi had crossed the severe threshold. Similar to the last very cold spell, the last time pollution was this high was on January 1, when the AQI was 441. It stayed almost at the same level (rising by a notch) on January 2 – both these days had similar weather conditions: low temperatur­es and calm winds.

An AQI between 301 and 400 “very poor”, while a reading between 401 and 500 is “severe”.

“The average wind speed on Thursday was less than 6kmph. This, along with the moisture content in the air, is not letting pollutants to disperse properly. Similar conditions will prevail till January 18,” said VK Soni, head of IMD’S environmen­t monitoring and research centre.

Union ministry of earth science’s air quality monitoring centre, System of Air Quality and Weather Forecastin­g and Research (Safar), warned that the coming week could be the “first extended extreme air pollution event for 2021”.

“The AQI is forecasted to deteriorat­e rapidly in the next three days. The combinatio­n of dense fog formation leading to secondary particulat­e formation under congenial conditions of high humidity, extremely low ventilatio­n and shallow boundary layer height is a major reason for the predicted smog episode in the coming days,” the Safar forecast read.

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