Cyclone
Nilofar due to slam into India, Pakistan
27
October, 2014
AHMEDABAD:
Indian officials were preparing today to evacuate residents and
stockpile food as they braced for another “very severe cyclonic
storm” due to slam into the country’s west coast and neighbouring
Pakistan.
Cyclone
Nilofar, building in the Arabian Sea, is due to hit India’s Gujarat
state and Pakistan’s southern coastal areas on Friday morning, the
Indian Meterological Department said.
“Our
taluka (district) level officers have been sent to villages in the
coastal areas to identify the population that is to be relocated,”
said M. S. Patel, an official from Gujarat’s Kutch district that is
expected to bear the brunt of the storm.
“We
will start shifting people in the coastal regions from tomorrow
morning,” he told AFP.
India’s
National Disaster Response Force has been put on alert in Gujarat,
while the state government was set to hold an emergency planning
meeting later today, officials said.
The
storm, packing winds of up to 125 kilometres (83 miles) per hour,
comes after Cyclone HudHud hit India’s east coast earlier this
month leaving some 20 people dead.
The
tail end of that cyclone also swept into neighbouring Nepal causing
Himalayan snowstorms that claimed more than 40 lives in the country’s
worst trekking disaster.
In
Pakistan, officials were on alert in case the storm turned towards
Sindh province and Karachi – the country’s biggest city of more
than 18 million people.
The
National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has warned local
agencies to take precautionary measures ahead of the cyclone.
Fishermen
have been advised not to venture into the open sea from Wednesday to
Friday, and those already at sea have been told to come back to
shore.
“We
have instructed our provincial chapter to warn fishermen that they
should refrain from fishing in the sea for few coming days,” NDMA
spokeman Ahmed Kamal told AFP.
Weather
officials in both countries said the cyclone may weaken before it
hits land, though it could still bring strong gusty winds and rains.
“It
would become quite weaker when it would hit ours and Indian coastal
areas,” Pakistan’s chief meteorologist Touseef Alam said.
“But
strong gusty winds and modest to heavy rains with thunderstorm are
expected.”
India
has six categories of tropical storms based on wind speeds and damage
expected, with Nilofar falling into category five, the second from
top.
Cyclone
Phailin, which struck India last October, had winds of up to 220 kph
and caused extensive damage.
India,
particularly its east coast, and neighbouring Bangladesh are
routinely hit by bad storms between April and November that cause
deaths and widespread damage to property.
--
AFP
MONSOON
MAYHEM
By
Khurram Husain
25
October, 2014
For
the Mughal Emperor Babar, one of the strangest characteristics of his
newly acquired kingdom in Hindustan was its hydrology. “Autumn
crops grow by the downpour of the rains themselves,” he wrote in
his memoirs, where he devoted a short section to the description of
the strange new land he had entered in the second decade of the 16th
century. “[A]nd strange it is that spring crops grow even when no
rain falls.” Used to the streams and lakes of the Ferghana Valley
in Central Asia, where he was raised, he noted the absence of running
water, except in the rivers — “so much so that towns and
countries subsist on the water of wells or on such collects in tanks
during the rains”.
The
young conqueror could only glimpse early in his career how hydrology
was central to the organisation of life in the land he had just
captured. “In Hindustan hamlets and villages, towns indeed, are
depopulated and set up in a moment! If they fix their eyes on a place
in which to settle, they need not dig watercourses or construct dams
because their crops are all rain grown,” he wrote.
Of
course none of this was such a big mystery. In fact, the answer to
what puzzled Babar was right in front of his eyes. The presence of
wells, for example, was the clearest proof that only 30 feet or 40
feet beneath the ground he was standing on, there was water. If the
young invader’s mind had not been so preoccupied with war, he might
have realised that there was a connection between rains and wells.
After all, it did not take a lot to realise that water from rains
recharged the underground aquifers and these were the reason why
plants could grow in the spring “even when no rain falls”.
But
Babar was a newcomer to India and his views about local hydrology
were naïve — at least by Indian standards. The great monsoon rains
have been showering their bounties on this land since time
immemorial, perhaps even before life emerged in this part of the
world. A rich tradition of folklore and religious symbolism has built
up around the rains and their arrival. In Gujarat, for instance,
since the eighth century at least, the flowering of the Cassia
fistula tree has been said to mean that monsoon rains are 45 days
away. In parts of Tamil Nadu, a westerly wind in June and July meant
rains were expected in the next two months, and farmers procured
their seeds and planted their crops accordingly. The manner of flight
of a particular bird, the flowering pattern of certain plants or the
direction of the wind on important religious occasions like Holi were
all used to forecast the arrival of monsoon rains, in times when
measurements of sea surface temperatures and atmospheric pressure was
unimaginable.
Scientific
observation of monsoon only began in the late 19th century, following
the failure of rains in 1877 and 1878. Those consecutive years of
monsoon failure created the worst ever recorded natural disaster in
the world at the time, causing widespread famine and death across
India and China. By the time the climatic perturbations behind the
failure of the rains ended in 1879, more than 5.5 million people had
died due to starvation in India alone. Such was the scale of
dependence that life here had developed to the timely arrival of
monsoon rains.
Following
this disaster, the government of British India set up an observatory
to study the Indian monsoon and devise a methodology for predicting
its arrival. In his book, The Dance of Air and Sea, Arnold Taylor
writes how the first director general of the Indian Meteorology
Department, Henry Blanford, “turned to a study of conditions beyond
India’s shores,” in his search for the drivers of the great
rains, and began compiling data from other territories of the empire.
During this exercise, he received a letter from the government
astronomer in Australia which contained “the first definitive
recognition of an international climatic connection” for monsoon.
“Comparing our records with those of India,” the letter read, “I
find a close correspondence or similarity of seasons with regard to
the prevalence of drought [between India and Australia], and there
can be little or no doubt that severe droughts occur as a rule
simultaneously over the two countries”.
Blanford
himself never made much out of this observation, preferring, instead,
to focus his mind on the varying thickness of the Himalayan snows as
a predictor of the monsoon rains. In 1904, Gilbert Walker, a
36-year-old statistician from Cambridge, replaced Blanford at the
Indian Meteorology Department as director general. He quickly
immersed himself in a 15-year study of climate data from around the
world. In 1923, he published his findings in which he revealed the
operation of a giant “see-saw in atmospheric pressure and
rainfall”; he observed a “swaying of pressure on a big scale …
between the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean” — when pressure
in one place is elevated, it is depressed in the other.
When
there was a low pressure system in the Indian Ocean, there would be a
dry period on the Pacific side and a wet season on the Indian Ocean
and vice versa. Gilbert studied data for the drought of 1877 and 1878
and found “there was a strong pressure reversal over the equatorial
Pacific” in those years. Forty-five years after the event, the
observatory set up by the colonial authorities had finally explained
the devastating drought of those two years.
Gilbert
Walker’s study was the first glimpse of the connections that tie
the Indian monsoon to climatic phenomena occurring, with a cyclical
regularity, on a planetary scale. Walker called it the great Southern
Oscillation, and it forms the bedrock of all studies of monsoon rains
to this day. Whenever Southern Oscillation reverses, monsoons are
affected. For the first time, an answer appeared to be emerging to
the question that had hung over the Indian subcontinent ever since
life emerged on its grassy plains: How can you tell when monsoon
rains are going to come?
But
the discovery of Southern Oscillation was not sufficient to answer
this question. We knew that a connection existed but to be able to
use that knowledge for forecasting purposes, it was necessary to know
what drove the oscillation in the first place. In short, it wasn’t
enough to know that it existed, we needed to know why it existed. And
that discovery was another half century away.
It
was in 1957 that the phenomenon known as El Nino was discovered.
Taylor writes of how Peruvian fishermen knew, for centuries, of a
warm water current that sweeps down along the Pacific coast, each
year. The current had been studied in the 19th century, and its
effects on marine life described in an article in 1892, by the
captain of a boat. His fellow fishermen on those waters “name this
countercurrent the current of El Niño (the Child Jesus) because it
has been observed to appear after Christmas,” writes the
captain.
In 1957, the first observation was made that confirmed El Niño’s effects on the Indian monsoon. The interaction between the ocean currents and the climate was shown to have global ramifications. Whenever an El Niño event appeared off the coast of South America, the monsoons across Asia suffered or failed completely.
In 1957, the first observation was made that confirmed El Niño’s effects on the Indian monsoon. The interaction between the ocean currents and the climate was shown to have global ramifications. Whenever an El Niño event appeared off the coast of South America, the monsoons across Asia suffered or failed completely.
But,
even as more details started appearing about mechanisms driving
monsoon, forecasting its arrival and failure with any meaningful
accuracy still remained a distant dream. The main reason for this was
logistical. In order to fully observe the El Niño event, it was
necessary to take extensive measurements of sea surface temperatures
across a large swathe of the Pacific Ocean as well as the Indian
Ocean. What is more, this data was required on a regular basis, the
more measurements per day, the better. Given that sea surface
temperatures were taken using ships, data requirements for
forecasting the monsoon were far beyond what the state of technology
could deliver at that time.
That
began to change in the 1960s. By the middle of that decade, computing
models were beginning to be used to process enormous quantities of
data that meteorological observations were generating. In 1970, the
first satellites equipped with thermal imaging cameras were put into
orbit. They were capable of providing high resolution sea surface
temperature readings for huge swathes of the world’s oceans.
By
the 1990s, advances in computing made possible extremely large and
complex models to quickly process enormous volumes of meteorological
data. The technique was called ensemble modelling, and saw large
numbers of machines working in parallel to do repeated runs on a live
stream of meteorological data coming in from a vast network of
satellites, weather radars and floating buoys on the ocean surface.
Global circulation models were born during this time and a picture of
the earth’s climate emerged that was updated on a daily basis.
But
technology had only just begun to make climatic phenomena
intelligible on a meaningful scale and a picture was slowly emerging
of the global circulations of air and water that governed the earth’s
climate. At that time, the climate itself began to change, driven by
man-made forces that were causing it to morph precisely when it began
to yield up its secrets.
In
the monsoon-fed regions of the northern subcontinent, a new priority
began to compete with the age-old quest to forecast the arrival of
rains — flood forecasting. Pakistan had its first three consecutive
years of flooding between 1992 and 1995. Bangladesh experienced a
flood in 1998 that submerged more than 60 per cent of the country for
three months. Both were unusual events. The latter event prompted a
search for answers to new questions that the changing monsoon pattern
had thrown up: Can the weather system driving the monsoon be
predictable on a timescale of months and years in advance? How far
can we discern mechanisms that underlie this predictability? Can
these mechanisms be modelled? What sort of data observations and
transmission systems will be required for “operational prediction”
of monsoon-related flooding?
The
search for answers to these questions led to the creation of the
Tropical Ocean-Global Atmosphere (TOGA) program in 1998.
Meteorological scientists, led by Dr Peter Webster, at Georgia
Institute of Technology teamed up with people in other research
centres to search for mechanisms which linked sea surface
temperatures connected with El Niño in the Pacific and unusual
monsoon rains in the northern subcontinent. The programme put
together the most detailed data on Pacific sea surface temperatures
gathered until then, and came to the conclusion that the effects of
El Niño, which had guided thinking on monsoon until then, were
perhaps overstated. “The picture that has emerged,” wrote the
scientists who worked on the programme, “is a system that is global
and interactive”. If we are to understand the behaviour of
monsoons, particularly for flood forecasting purposes, they said it
would be necessary to “extend climate prediction from the Pacific
basin to the global domain”.
Starting
out as a purely localised phenomenon, by the middle of the 20th
century, monsoon came to be understood as part of a large, planetary
oscillation linked to the Pacific Ocean. In the opening years of the
21st century, the cutting edge of scientific work discovered that the
linkages go beyond that to larger climatic circulations. The data and
modelling requirements for flood forecasting, therefore, have become
truly stupendous.
It is in this context that a model was developed at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the opening decade of the 21st century. It was capable of ingesting mind-boggling volumes of data from global meteorological databases, and processing them to yield startlingly accurate forecasts of streamflow in the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers, with a lead time of up to 10 days. The model was deployed in Bangladesh in 2003, and provided accurate forecasts of floods in 2004 and 2007. In 2009, the model was handed over to the Bangladesh government. The creators of the model now turned their attention to Pakistan.
In 2010, Pakistan was struck by the worst floods in its history that displaced close to 20 million people. There have been four monsoon seasons since then, and each one has seen a catastrophic flood caused by unusual rains. The creators of the model arrived just in time.
Five
floods in five years is evidence enough that something big is
happening around us. So far, Pakistan is lucky that no major breach
of a hydrological structure has occurred during any of these floods,
but how long will this luck last? Understanding the science behind
the torrential rains that fall upon us with biblical ferocity, every
year, is critical if we are not to head into a disaster of historic
proportions. Developing an action plan to mitigate the impact of
floods is now mission critical for Pakistan. We cannot afford to be
like the young invader any longer, head addled on war, who could only
scratch his head at the hydrological mysteries of India, even as the
answers to his questions were right there in front of his eyes.
Part
I of Herald’s cover story on floods can be read
here
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