Summers: India
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'' Average temperatures in India, Jan>Dec, during a ‘typical’ year '' | '' Average temperatures in India, Jan>Dec, during a ‘typical’ year '' | ||
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+ | =Extreme weather days= | ||
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+ | ==2024: March 1-June 9== | ||
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+ | [https://epaper.indiatimes.com/article-share?article=14_06_2024_027_011_cap_TOI / Vishwa.Mohan/ ''The Times of India''] | ||
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+ | and | ||
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+ | [https://epaper.indiatimes.com/article-share?article=14_06_2024_033_017_cap_TOI / Vishwa.Mohan/ ''The Times of India''] | ||
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+ | The summer of 2024: India faced what was till then the longest ever spell of heatwave days These numbers were more than double of what these regions normally get in a year. | ||
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+ | 14 of 36 meteorological subdivisions in country recorded over 15 heatwave days. These subdivisions are spread across country, with east and north India the worst hit. | ||
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+ | “This was expected and predicted in advance. In the year following an El Niño year (2023) we tend to g et more heatwaves. That is due to favourable atmospheric circulation for heatwaves,” said Madhavan Rajeevan, climate scientist and former secretary, ministry of earth sciences. | ||
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+ | ''' The Number of extreme weather days in 2024: March 1-June 9 ''' | ||
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+ | 27 Odisha | ||
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+ | 23 Rajasthan, western | ||
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+ | 21 West Bengal Gangetic | ||
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+ | 20 Chandigarh | ||
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+ | 20 Delhi (23 days, till 13 June) | ||
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+ | 20 Haryana | ||
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+ | 20 U.P. west | ||
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+ | === High altitude regions=== | ||
+ | ''' Heatwave days reported in relatively cool high altitude regions ''' | ||
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+ | '''2024: March 1-June 9 ''' | ||
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+ | 12 Himachal | ||
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+ | 11Sikkim , | ||
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+ | 6 J&K | ||
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+ | 2 Uttarakhand | ||
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+ | [[Category:Climate/Meteorology|S SUMMERS: INDIA | ||
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= Heat waves= | = Heat waves= | ||
− | == | + | ==Definitions== |
Heat wave conditions are when the maximum temperature in an area is four or more degrees above the normal temperature. ([https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F04%2F08&entity=Ar00202&sk=A48EFE09&mode=text ''The Times of India'']) | Heat wave conditions are when the maximum temperature in an area is four or more degrees above the normal temperature. ([https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F04%2F08&entity=Ar00202&sk=A48EFE09&mode=text ''The Times of India'']) | ||
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+ | Heatwaves are spells of unusually high temperatures as compared to what is normally expected over a region. Thus, temperatures at which heatwaves are declared differ from place to place based on the historical temperatures of that region. | ||
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+ | A heatwave is declared when the maximum temperature of a weather station is at least | ||
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+ | 40°C in the plains | ||
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+ | 30°C in the hills (“hilly regions”) | ||
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+ | 37°C in coastal areas | ||
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+ | and it is 4.5 to 6.4°C above the normal temperature. If it’s 6.5° or more above normal, a severe heatwave is declared. Also, heatwave is automatically considered if the temperature touches 45°C and a severe heatwave declared if it reaches 47°C | ||
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+ | (From: [https://epaper.indiatimes.com/article-share?article=14_06_2024_027_011_cap_TOI Vishwa.Mohan/ ''The Times of India''] | ||
+ | and | ||
+ | [https://epaper.indiatimes.com/article-share?article=14_06_2024_033_017_cap_TOI Vishwa.Mohan/ ''The Times of India'']) | ||
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+ | [[Category:Climate/Meteorology|S SUMMERS: INDIA | ||
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=The onset of summer= | =The onset of summer= | ||
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See graphic, '2012-19: The first 30°C day of the year in Delhi' | See graphic, '2012-19: The first 30°C day of the year in Delhi' | ||
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+ | ===Highest minimum temperature=== | ||
+ | ====21st century==== | ||
+ | ''' 34 degrees Celsius on 2018 June 13 ''' | ||
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+ | 33.3 degrees Celsius, on 2024 June 14; five degrees above normal, at Safdarjung, the city’s base station. | ||
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+ | Other Delhi stations on 2024 June 14 recorded: Pitampura (35.7 degrees Celsius), Pusa (35), Raj Ghat (34), SPS Mayur Vihar (33.2), Jafarpur (32.4), Ayanagar (32.2) and Najafgarh (31.9). | ||
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+ | ''' ‘Warm nights’: ''' India Meteorological Department’s (IMD’s) definition: When the maximum temperature is above normal and the minimum is 4.5 degrees and more above normal temperature [https://epaper.indiatimes.com/article-share?article=15_06_2024_007_003_cap_TOI Priyangi.Agarwal, ''The Times of India''] | ||
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==The first 30°C day of the year== | ==The first 30°C day of the year== |
Latest revision as of 20:17, 1 August 2024
This is a collection of articles, mainly from the Delhi- based press. |
This page is under construction. Data will continue to be added over the next several years.
Contents |
[edit] Average temperatures
[edit] Jan>Dec during a ‘typical’ year
See graphic:
Average temperatures in India, Jan>Dec, during a ‘typical’ year
[edit] Extreme weather days
[edit] 2024: March 1-June 9
/ Vishwa.Mohan/ The Times of India
and
/ Vishwa.Mohan/ The Times of India
The summer of 2024: India faced what was till then the longest ever spell of heatwave days These numbers were more than double of what these regions normally get in a year.
14 of 36 meteorological subdivisions in country recorded over 15 heatwave days. These subdivisions are spread across country, with east and north India the worst hit.
“This was expected and predicted in advance. In the year following an El Niño year (2023) we tend to g et more heatwaves. That is due to favourable atmospheric circulation for heatwaves,” said Madhavan Rajeevan, climate scientist and former secretary, ministry of earth sciences.
The Number of extreme weather days in 2024: March 1-June 9
27 Odisha
23 Rajasthan, western
21 West Bengal Gangetic
20 Chandigarh
20 Delhi (23 days, till 13 June)
20 Haryana
20 U.P. west
[edit] High altitude regions
Heatwave days reported in relatively cool high altitude regions
2024: March 1-June 9
12 Himachal
11Sikkim ,
6 J&K
2 Uttarakhand
[edit] Heat waves
[edit] Definitions
Heat wave conditions are when the maximum temperature in an area is four or more degrees above the normal temperature. (The Times of India)
Heatwaves are spells of unusually high temperatures as compared to what is normally expected over a region. Thus, temperatures at which heatwaves are declared differ from place to place based on the historical temperatures of that region.
A heatwave is declared when the maximum temperature of a weather station is at least
40°C in the plains
30°C in the hills (“hilly regions”)
37°C in coastal areas
and it is 4.5 to 6.4°C above the normal temperature. If it’s 6.5° or more above normal, a severe heatwave is declared. Also, heatwave is automatically considered if the temperature touches 45°C and a severe heatwave declared if it reaches 47°C
(From: Vishwa.Mohan/ The Times of India and Vishwa.Mohan/ The Times of India)
[edit] The onset of summer
[edit] 2012-19: The first 30°C day of the year in Delhi
See graphic, '2012-19: The first 30°C day of the year in Delhi'
[edit] Highest minimum temperature
[edit] 21st century
34 degrees Celsius on 2018 June 13
33.3 degrees Celsius, on 2024 June 14; five degrees above normal, at Safdarjung, the city’s base station.
Other Delhi stations on 2024 June 14 recorded: Pitampura (35.7 degrees Celsius), Pusa (35), Raj Ghat (34), SPS Mayur Vihar (33.2), Jafarpur (32.4), Ayanagar (32.2) and Najafgarh (31.9).
‘Warm nights’: India Meteorological Department’s (IMD’s) definition: When the maximum temperature is above normal and the minimum is 4.5 degrees and more above normal temperature Priyangi.Agarwal, The Times of India
[edit] The first 30°C day of the year
[edit] Delhi: 2016-20
See graphic:
The first 30°C day of the year in Delhi, 2016-20
[edit] Warm summers
[edit] Delhi
[edit] 40°C plus temperatures
[edit] 2018-2023
40°C plus temperatures during the summer in Delhi, 2018-2023
See the graphic
[edit] REGION-WISE DETAILS
[edit] Churu
[edit] 2019, 30 May- 5 June
Ashish Mehta, June 6, 2019: The Times of India
How does one wake up to a minimum temperature of 34 degrees Celsius, or plan the day when mornings, afternoons and evenings melt into one solid time block, seamlessly dissolving in each other under a burning, brutal sky? Life in Rajasthan’s Churu now is like living on the edge of a tandoor. The glow of the fire seemingly inches away from scalding the skin.
At 50.8 degrees Celsius + (recorded last Saturday) and 50.3 (last Monday), it was the hottest place in the world. And it’s driving people crazy. For more than a week now, the temperature has hovered around that point. Men and women have altered their work cycle, eating habits and even lifestyle to cope with the blistering heat. Nothing seems enough.
“What has added to our agony is the power cut that starts from 4am, when it’s already close to 35 degrees C,” said Radhey Sharma, a retired government employee at the Housing Board Colony in Churu.
“Thereafter, we go out and bring at least 10 kg of ice, which is like a regular grocery item these days, to put it in the water tank and air-coolers.” There’s a rush of people at the district hospital, all complaining of vomiting, diarrhoea, heat stroke and skin ailments. Leaves of doctors have been cancelled and the entire district is on high alert.
“At least 70 patients are admitted in various wards for different heat-related problems,” said Dr Goga Ram, principal medical officer, Churu government hospital. He doesn’t expect the footfall to recede in the days to come.
Not surprisingly, says another doctor, Churu’s people have quickly changed the way they eat. Chaach (butter milk), raw onion, curd and chapati have become some kind of a universal breakfast, with many skipping lunch altogether.
“During such weather, it’s better to fill oneself up with fluids,” explained the medical man. “The more you consume oily stuff and carbohydrates, the greater the chances of compounding health problems.”
Out on the road, it’s almost eerie. By 10.30am, when most of India is bustling, the streets start emptying out in Churu. Public places are deserted, there are few passengers at railway stations and bus stands, and taxi-wallahs are nowhere to be seen.
Farmers, those mostly out in the unforgiving sun, hit their fields at 4am. It’s the same pattern that’s followed in neighbouring Binasar, Poti, Satara, Jasrasar and Jaasasar. “We don’t have an option,” said Balram Chaudhary in Jasrasar village, 24 km away from Churu. “By 7 am, it’s already simmering.”
It is toughest for nomadic people like the Gadiya-Lohars, some of whom work as ironsmiths by the roadside. “We wear wet cloths,” said Manhori as she hammered away near a furnace.
On measures taken by the district administration, a senior officer said they are sprinkling water all around, urging people to drink more water and regularly assessing the situation at hospitals. There isn’t much anyone can do when it’s so hot that birds start falling off trees.
The temperature touched 47.3 degrees Celsiu + s. Some saw it as bit of a respite. “It is a temporary relief,” said an officer at the Churu Met office. He wasn’t trying to be funny.
[edit] Panaji
[edit] Warm Summers
[edit] Highest single-day maximum temperature
1969 to 2023: there were 14 days when the maximum temperature in Panaji was 38°C or higher
39.8°C : 1989 April 7 The highest maximum temperature recorded in Panaji
See also February weather in India
[edit] Uttarakhand
[edit] Warmest March- April
2222: March 1 -April 20: Temperatures have been settling at least 5-7 degrees above normal, in both the plains and hills.
2004 March, was when This last happened, though for a lesser duration, when temperatures remained above normal by 4-6°C for 15 days.
[edit] See also
January weather in India <> February weather in India <> March weather in India <> April weather in India <> May weather in India <> June weather in India <> Summers: India: statistics and trends that cover more than one month.<> July weather in India <> August weather in India <> September weather in India <> Monsoons: India: statistics and trends that cover more than one month.<> October weather in India <> November weather in India <> December weather in India <> Winter rains: India: statistics and trends that cover more than one month. <> Winters: India: statistics and trends that cover more than one month.