Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Storm warnings went unheeded?

- Malavika Vyawahare malavika.vyawahare@htlive.com ■

NEWDELHI: Warnings of the chain of thundersto­rms that claimed 125 lives were issued at least three days before the freak weather phenomenon wreaked havoc across six Indian states, officials from the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) said on Friday. State agencies, however, said the alerts were not specific enough while experts rued that the forecaster­s did not foresee the severity of the deadly weather phenomenon.

What wasn’t flagged, however, was the intensity and the unusually widespread nature of the storms, the officials added. That, coupled with poor disseminat­ion of informatio­n to those who were likely to be affected led to widespread damage and took a huge toll on human lives in Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan.

“We issued warnings on April 29, 30 and May 1,” KJ Ramesh, director general of the IMD, said. “These include colour-coded maps based on the severity and likely duration of the storms.” The dispatches and warnings are shared with the disaster management authoritie­s and local officials as well, according to Ramesh. However, the informatio­n did not reach all the vulnerable people, he said.

“We are working on improving the public disseminat­ion,” he added.

But experts and other weather officials said the severity and range of the storms was underestim­ated by the forecaster­s.

“Does IMD’s responsibi­lity end with telling the administra, tion? By putting it on the website and messaging officials? If you are issuing warnings why don’t you have a warning disseminat­ion system in place?” asked Piyoosh Rautela, a Dehradun-based disaster management expert.

“If you communicat­e general informatio­n about a region, how will a person know what is going to happen in their area? Unless you are specific about space, time and magnitude, the informatio­n is not useful,” Rautela added.

The UP government raised the issue of non-availabili­ty of accurate

alerts from the meteorolog­ical department at a meeting of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) in Delhi on Friday.

Relief commission­er Sanjay Kumar told NDMA officers that the state should have been given pin-pointed alerts regarding Wednesday’s storm so that an effective mitigation mechanism could have been put in place.

Thundersto­rms are a regular feature of the pre-monsoon season in India, but their intensity and frequency is likely to increase with a changing cli- studies show.

People living in mud houses with thatched roofs were the most badly affected as storms packing wind speeds of up to 130km per hour cut a swathe through six states -- Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttarakhan­d, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab and Haryana.

The storms were blamed by experts on a confluence of three weather factors - a cyclonic circulatio­n, induced by a western atmospheri­c disturbanc­e, high moisture levels brought by easterly winds and a recent spell of unusually high temperatur­es that soared to 45 degrees Celsius. The result was a squall line or a chain of thundersto­rm clouds that emerged on Wednesday afternoon from north Rajasthan to eastern Uttar Pradesh, passing over Delhi as well.

“We are trying to improve communicat­ion, not just to officials but also people in a structured manner, and also the modelling to improve prediction­s,” M Rajeevan, secretary, ministry of earth sciences, said.

Apart from its weather stations, IMD relies on satellite data from Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro) to track weather events and possible disasters. “We’re only responsibl­e for providing the data, analysing it and coming up with prediction­s is IMD’s role and the accuracy depends on how good their modelling is,” said an Isro official who asked not to be named.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi approved ex-gratia relief of Rs 2 lakh each for the next of kin of those killed in the dust storm on Wednesday.

 ?? PTI ?? ■ A tree uprooted in Wednesday's massive storm at Cheet village in Agra district on Friday.
PTI ■ A tree uprooted in Wednesday's massive storm at Cheet village in Agra district on Friday.

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