Heatwave
claims over 1,100 across country; relief after monsoon hits around
May 31
26
May, 2015
An
unrelenting heat wave has killed more than 1,100 people across
the country over a fortnight with southern neighbours Andhra Pradesh
and Telangana bearing the brunt, as torrid temperatures melted roads
in the national capital and have forced people indoors.
Authorities
said on Tuesday most of the victims were construction workers, the
elderly or the homeless, as the weather office predicted the mercury
will continue to soar this week with substantial relief expected only
when the southwest monsoon hits the Indian mainland around May
31.
The death toll due to severe heat wave sweeping Andhra Pradesh has risen to 852 with the scorching weather claiming 202 lives in Prakasam district alone, officials said.
The death toll due to severe heat wave sweeping Andhra Pradesh has risen to 852 with the scorching weather claiming 202 lives in Prakasam district alone, officials said.
At
least 266 deaths have been reported in Telangana where a maximum
temperature of 44.5°C was recorded in Ramagundam city.
Jangameswarapuram in Andhra was two notches higher at 46.4°C, though
the absence of power cuts came as huge relief for residents of the
two states who chose not to venture outside during the hottest part
of the day.
An auto rickshaw driver rests on a hot summer day in Hyderabad (Reuters Photo)
The
meteorological department issued “red box” warnings for Odisha,
Jharkhand and coastal Andhra Pradesh, signalling high chances of
heatstroke, dehydration and fatality with temperatures inching
upwards of 45°C and conditions worsened by constant dry, sweltering
winds.
A
sizzling sun baked large parts of Punjab and Haryana as maximum
temperatures settled at a few notches above normal in most areas.
Karnal in Haryana recorded 44°C, four degrees above normal, while
searing heat swept Ludhiana in Punjab at 42.6°C.
As
if the sweltering conditions were not enough, stifling humidity
levels compounded the problem for people in Uttar Pradesh’s capital
Lucknow, as the city recorded a maximum temperature of 43.5°C with
relative humidity at 70%. Agra was the hottest part of the state with
the mercury hitting 46.1°C.
The
heat wave was mainly triggered by an abrupt end to pre-monsoon
showers and missing storms. A brewing cyclonic weather pattern in the
Arabian Sea two weeks ago lost steam quickly, while depressions, or
rain-causing systems, in the Bay of Bengal headed off towards the
northwest states which are getting plentiful rains.
Odisha continued to reel with Titlagarh in Balangir district clocking the highest temperature of 47.6°C, while authorities said they received reports of 67 deaths in the past week.
Delhi
recorded a maximum temperature of 45°C, marginally cooler than May
25 which was the season’s hottest day, though zebra crossings at
some places melted under the glare of a scorching sun.
Sporadic
rains cooled down the eastern state of Jharkhand as the maximum
temperature dropped to a comfortable 35°C in capital Ranchi, while
it also drizzled in parts of neighbouring West Bengal including its
power centre, Kolkata.
Temperatures
hovered between 41 and 45°C in Rajasthan, weather officials said, as
streets and markets in major cities and towns wore a deserted look
during peak hours.
People rest near a hoarding of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi. The blistering sun didn’t spare the Capital too, which recorded its hottest day of the season so far at 45.5 degrees Celsius, five notches above normal. In Uttar Pradesh, temperatures hovered around the 45 degrees Celsius mark with Allahabad recording a high of 46.4 degrees. The met office predicted isolated dust storms and thunderstorms on Tuesday but said the heat wave would continue. (PTI Photo)
Officials
recorded seven deaths in Gujarat’s capital Ahmedabad this month
with the civic body issuing an “orange alert”, indicating a
prolonged heat wave, expecting temperatures to shoot up to 43 to 45°C
Celsius over the next seven days.
Authorities
advised people to stay indoors and consume plenty of fluids and
experts warned no let-up in the heat wave would lead to large-scale
power outages in several parts of north India, bringing back memories
of a horrific blackout in 2012 that affected nearly 600 million
people.
(With
inputs from PTI)
Read
No respite from blistering heat wave till May 29; 500 dead and 'red box' warning issued for 3 states
No respite from blistering heat wave till May 29; 500 dead and 'red box' warning issued for 3 states
Beat the heat: A ready-reckoner on keeping cool
A rickshaw-puller rests under the shade of an overhead bridge on a hot summer day in Hyderabad. Andhra Pradesh recorded 76 deaths on Monday, even as the number of deaths due to heat stroke came down in Telangana. (AP Photo)
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