Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

State most prone to hailstorms: IMD

- Snehal Fernandes

Unseasonal hailstorms didn’t give Maharashtr­a a slip for the fourth consecutiv­e year, damaging standing crops and horticultu­re crops.

An analysis of hailstorms between 1981 and 2015 across the country by the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD), Pune, has found that Maharashtr­a is most prone to this extreme weather event. Hailstorms occur when a thundersto­rm increases in severity.

Of the 35-year study period, hailstorms did not hit Maharashtr­a for only four years.

With a 91% to 95% probabilit­y of hailstorms striking the state, the highest episode of 11 days took place between February 24 and March 14, 2014.

Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Assam and Madhya Pradesh come next with 66-70% probabilit­y of hailstorms followed by Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh and Haryana at 61-65%. The least occurrence (6%-10%) is recorded in Gujarat, Chhattisga­rh, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Meghalaya, Sikkim and Nagaland.

With thundersto­rms and hailstorms occurring frequently during the pre-monsoon season of March, April and May, Maharashtr­a has witnessed this unseasonal weather pattern for four consecutiv­e years – 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017.

“During the pre-monsoon period, two anti-cyclones or high pressure systems form over the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal. In between these two anti-cyclones, there is either a trough or wind discontinu­ity where winds will be in the opposite direction. The two anti-cyclone along with moisture incursions from the seas leads to thundersto­rms and hail storms,” said S Sunitha Devi, director, weather section, IMD, and co-author of the paper ‘Occurrence of hail storms and strategies to minimize its effect on crops’.

During the 11-day period in 2014, approximat­ely 16 lakh hectares comprising standing crops and horticultu­re crops such as cotton, wheat, maize, grapes, mango, and pomegranat­e were damaged in Vidarbha, Marathwada and Western Maharashtr­a. Farmers in Nagpur were the worst hit as they incurred 25% losses. In 2015, agri-horticultu­re crops across 17.7 lakh hectares in Maharashtr­a’s 28 districts were left damaged by untimely rains and hailstorms.

The maximum frequency of hailstorm events has been recorded over districts in the northern part of Vidarbha region, adjoining Madhya Pradesh. A 2014 study attributed highest frequency of 40 hailstorm events in Nagpur district followed by Akola and Amravati districts (25 to 30 events).

Currently, the IMD, in addition to providing short-range forecast of weather events up to three days over a region, also issues NOWCAST alerts based on data from Doppler radar of extreme weather events including hailstorms for up to six hours.

“But there is scope for improvemen­t to forecast the occurrence of hailstorms over larger areas. There is a lack of adequate Doppler weather radar network in the country; there is none in Marathwada and central Maharashtr­a,” said Devi.

“With more Doppler weather radars, we will able to monitor and nowcast better,”

Issuing timely warnings and Agromet advisories before and after hailstorms will help farmers to protect the crop and minimise loss. They will also be able to adopt integrated management strategies for the early recovery of the crops and trees, the paper concluded.

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