Bengaluru Weather Getting Worse: Due to the state’s intense rains, the district collector of Bengaluru has declared today, October 21, a holiday for all of the city’s schools and Anganwadi. Because of the cyclonic storm in the Bay of Bengal, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued a weather warning for heavy rainfall throughout coastal India and Karnataka.
In coastal India, heavy rainfall is anticipated, Bad Weather
According to the IMD, an upper air cyclonic circulation above the central Andaman Sea has migrated to the North Andaman Sea, bringing with it the possibility of severe rainfall in India’s coastal regions. According to the IMD, “South Interior Karnataka and Andaman & Nicobar are likely to experience very heavy rainfall.”
It also stated that Gujarat, Konkan and Goa, Madhya Maharashtra, Coastal and North Interior Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Rayalaseema, and Andhra Pradesh are all anticipated to see significant rainfall.
As the cyclonic circulation approaches the Bay of Bengal
The India Meteorological Department announced on Sunday that a “Low-Pressure Area” over the Bay of Bengal is expected to strengthen into a cyclonic storm by October 23. The coasts of West Bengal and Odisha may be impacted by the “cyclonic disturbance”.
The cyclonic storm is expected to strike the coast of West Bengal and Odisha this week. According to the meteorological service. According to Sambad English, two major meteorological models, the IMD-GFS and the ECMWF, have suggested that the system may make landfall in Puri. While the precise location of the landfall is unknown.
Over the course of the next day, a low-pressure system is most likely to develop over the east-central Bay of Bengal and the nearby north Andaman Sea. According to the IMD’s most recent bulletin. “It is very likely to move west-north-westwards and intensify into a depression by October 22 morning. And into a cyclonic storm by October 23 over east-central Bay of Bengal.”
“On October 24–25, there may be 20 cm of rain in certain coastal areas. Additionally, the spell’s intensity may rise to 20 to 30 cm. And in some locations, above 30,” IMD Director-General Mrutyunjay Mohapatra told a Bhubaneswar local TV station.
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