Schools-colleges closed, but rain forecast turns a damp squib in Mumbai
PTI, Sep 19, 2019, 2:17 PM IST
Mumbai: With the weather department issuing a ‘red alert’ for rain in Mumbai, the Maharashtra government declared a holiday for schools and colleges in the city on Thursday.
However, as people geared up to tackle the situation, the high rainfall warning turned out to be a damp squib as the city hardly received any showers till Thursday afternoon.
While the city received some showers late Wednesday night, it remained almost dry on Thursday.
The school education minister Ashish Shelar’s order for closure of schools and colleges issued late Wednesday night also remained ineffective, as several educational institutions in the city and suburbs remained open.
The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) on Wednesday issued a red rain alert, indicating “extremely heavy rainfall”, for Mumbai and Raigad districts.
The irregular heating and cooling of the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal pushed cloud precipitation in Mumbai to a new high, with the city recording its wettest monsoon season this year since 1954.
When contacted, an IMD official said, “This year there has been continuous depression over Madhya Pradesh at regular intervals, which increased the overall rainfall in Mumbai and neighbouring districts.”
“The state capital has received total 3,467 mm rain from June 1 till September 17, surpassing the 3,451 mm downpour recorded in 1954. With 11 days more to go this month, the city will get a record rainfall figure by then,” he said.
The cyclonic circulation and related low-pressure over south Madhya Pradesh has been driving the humid westerly winds from the Arabian sea.
As the circulation gradually moves westward in next few days, the coastal areas of the state, including Mumbai, are likely to witness very heavy rains, the official said.
According to a weather expert, the country is going through a strong ‘Indian Ocean Dipole’ (an irregular oscillation of sea-surface temperatures) and it is driving the intensity of showers across various places, including Mumbai.
The southwest monsoon arrived in Mumbai this year on June 18, as against the normal onset date of June 7.
Repeated low-pressure formation over north Bay of Bengal and Odisha resulted in at least 25 per cent excess rainfall in central India, with the Konkan and Goa regions receiving close to 60 per cent excess downpour so far, the expert said.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Delhi: Private school in Rohini receives bomb threat email day after low-intensity blast
SC to hear on Dec 9 plea of mosque committee related to dispute at Mathura Shahi Idgah complex
Violinist Balabhaskar’s father claims son killed by gold smuggling mafia
Joint India-Lanka naval operation, 500 kg of crystal meth seized
‘Pakodas for masses, halwa for chosen few’: Congress slams Modi govt as ILO report flags wage inequality
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Karnataka cabinet expansion unlikely: Shivakumar
Security guard killed in hit-and-run incident in Kengeri
Siddaramaiah meets PM Modi, seeks urgent clearances for two irrigation projects
Delhi: Private school in Rohini receives bomb threat email day after low-intensity blast
Ed Sheeran announces six-city India tour for 2025
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.