Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Heatwave builds up in parts of city; temp crosses 46 deg C at Najafgarh

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: A heatwave broiled parts of Delhi on Friday, with the mercury soaring to 46.1 degrees Celsius at Najafgarh.

The weather stations at Jafarpur and Mungeshpur recorded a maximum temperatur­e of 45.6 degrees Celsius and 45.4 degrees Celsius, respective­ly, six notches above normal for this time of the year. Pitampura also reeled under heatwave conditions, recording a maximum temperatur­e of 44.7 degrees Celsius.

The Safdarjung Observator­y, Delhi’s base station, recorded a high of 42.5 degrees Celsius.

The India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) has issued an orange alert, warning of a severe heatwave at many places in the capital on Saturday.

A yellow alert has been issued to caution people about a heatwave on Sunday.

The IMD uses four colour codes for weather warnings — green (no action needed), yellow (watch and stay updated), orange (be prepared) and red (take action).

The mercury is predicted to touch the 44-degree mark at the Safdarjung Observator­y on Saturday. Temperatur­es may leap to 47 degrees Celsius at isolated places, weather experts said.

Cloudy sky may provide some relief from the intense heat next week.

This is the fifth heatwave — one in March and three in April — in the Capital this summer season.

With scanty rains owing to feeble western disturbanc­es, Delhi had recorded its second hottest April this year since 1951 with a monthly average maximum temperatur­e of 40.2 degrees Celsius. A heatwave at the month-end had sent the mercury soaring to 46 and 47 degrees Celsius in several parts of the city.

The Capital got a miniscule 0.3 mm of rainfall in April against a monthly average of 12.2 mm. March saw nil rainfall against the normal of 15.9 mm. The IMD had predicted above normal temperatur­es in May.

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