City
Epaper

Heavy rain disrupts normal life in Tamil Nadu, boosts inflows to major reservoirs

By IANS | Updated: May 10, 2026 09:20 IST

Tiruchy, May 10 Continuous rainfall ranging from moderate to heavy intensity since Friday evening has affected several districts ...

Open in App

Tiruchy, May 10 Continuous rainfall ranging from moderate to heavy intensity since Friday evening has affected several districts across Tamil Nadu’s Delta and southern regions, disrupting normal life, causing waterlogging in many urban areas, and significantly increasing inflows into major reservoirs.

However, farmers welcomed the timely showers, saying the rains would greatly benefit standing summer crops and ongoing cultivation activities.

As forecast by the India Meteorological Department (IMD), widespread rains began on Friday evening and continued intermittently till Saturday morning across Tiruchy, Thanjavur, Thiruvarur, Nagapattinam, Mayiladuthurai, Perambalur, Ariyalur and parts of Pudukkottai districts.

In Thanjavur district, Budalur recorded the highest rainfall at 5.2 cm, while Thanjavur town received 1.6 cm. In Tiruchy district, Devimangalam received 2.58 cm of rainfall, followed by Pullambadi with 1.14 cm and Lalgudi with 1.06 cm.

Continuous showers in Tiruchy city led to waterlogging in several low-lying areas, inconveniencing motorists and commuters. Heavy rainfall was also recorded in the coastal belt, with Mayiladuthurai town receiving 2.3 cm and Nagapattinam town 2.12 cm of rainfall.

In the Pudukkottai district, Tirumayam and Aranthangi received 2.5 cm and 2 cm of rainfall, respectively. Kudavasal in the Thiruvarur district recorded the highest rainfall in the district at 2.34 cm.

Farmers across the Delta region expressed relief over the rainfall, stating that it would support standing summer paddy crops and improve soil moisture for cultivation of rain-fed crops such as pulses, maize and groundnut.

Many farmers had already begun new crop cultivation following the recent summer showers. Meanwhile, heavy overnight rainfall in Tirunelveli and Tenkasi districts substantially improved inflow into several dams in the Western Ghats region.

Oothu in the Manjolai tea estate area recorded the highest rainfall in Tirunelveli district at 17 cm. The increased rainfall boosted water storage in major reservoirs, including Papanasam, Manimuthar, Servalar, Gadananathi, Ramanathi and Adavinainar dams.

Officials said the inflow to the Papanasam dam more than doubled to 215 cusecs, while water levels in several dams rose sharply within a day due to continuous rain in the catchment areas.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsOlise strike leaves Wolfsburg in final-day battle to avoid relegation

EntertainmentTrisha Krishnan smiles ear-to-ear as Vijay prepares to be sworn-in as 13th CM of Tamil Nadu

National‘Bengal got freedom’: BJP’s Dilip Jaiswal hails formation of 1st BJP govt in state

NationalJoseph Vijay Takes Oath as Tamil Nadu CM in Coat Suit, Breaks Traditional Attire Trend

InternationalLarge oil slick detected near Iran's Kharg Island: Report

National Realted Stories

NationalVijay sworn in as Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, ends six-decade Dravidian parties dominance

NationalPIL in SC seeks minimum wages, employee status for priests and staff in state-controlled temples

NationalRahul Gandhi, Vijay share stage in Chennai ahead of TVK chief's oath taking ceremony

NationalRahul Gandhi expresses grief over Karnataka Minister Sudhakar's demise, calls him 'torchbearer of Congress ideology'

NationalTamil Nadu enters new era of politics as Vijay takes oath as CM