Garavi Gujarat USA

Parts of India record hottest April

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EASTERN India experience­d its hottest April on record as a heatwave scorched parts of the country amid a general election, killing at least nine people, and the weather office on Wednesday (1) forecast above normal temperatur­es for May too.

Searing heat has been cited by political analysts as one of the reasons for low voter turnout in the seven-phase parliament­ary election that began on 19 April, with results due on 4 June.

Heatwave conditions are, however, forecast to abate gradually in the coming days.

The mean temperatur­e in eastern India was 28.12 Celsius (82.61 Fahrenheit) in April, the warmest since records began in 1901, with experts blaming a combinatio­n of factors.

‘In an El Nino year, you get more heating,’ said Mrutyunjay Mohapatra, chief of the India Meteorolog­ical Department, referring to a climate pattern that typically leads to hot and dry weather in Asia and heavier rains in parts of the Americas.

He said fewer thundersto­rms and an anti-cyclonic circulatio­n near India’s southeaste­rn coast were causing heatwaves. ‘Wind blows from land towards the sea during an anti-cyclone ..., so land becomes warmer and temperatur­e rises.’

In April, the eastern Indian state of West Bengal recorded the most number of heatwave days for the month in the last 15 years, followed by the neighborin­g coastal state of Odisha where heat conditions were the worst in nine years.

Authoritie­s have also declared a rare heatwave in the southweste­rn coastal state of Kerala, where at least two deaths have been recorded due to soaring temperatur­es.

Central and northweste­rn India, which includes major wheat producing states that typically witness heatwaves this time of the year, have been largely spared due to intermitte­nt thundersho­wers last month,

Mohapatra said.

The weather office said rainfall in May is likely to be normal and that it expects more showers during the second half of the monsoon season in August and September as compared to June and July due to the La Nina climate pattern, which typically brings higher rainfall to India.

Monsoon is the lifeblood of India’s economy, delivering 70 percent of the rain needed to water crops and recharge reservoirs, and the met department has predicted that India will receive above normal monsoon rainfall in 2024.

 ?? A man takes a bath near a railway track in Ajmer ??
A man takes a bath near a railway track in Ajmer

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