City
Epaper

Mumbai, Ahmedabad witnessing 3rd successive dust storm in one month

By IANS | Updated: February 26, 2022 23:05 IST

New Delhi, Feb 26 A third successive dust storm in the past one month this time highly ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Feb 26 A third successive dust storm in the past one month this time highly widespread but not intense has emerged and engulfed the entire Arabian sea with dust, an air quality researcher scientist said on Saturday.

As is evident from satellite imagery since past two days, there are slow but consistent intrusion owing to favourable winds and a push due to the westerly disturbance the same that brought hailstorm in NW India, including parts of Delhi has marked the entry of huge dust cloud with low density near Surat coast.

This has prompted the Air Quality Index (AQI) of Ahmedabad and surrounding areas right up to Maharashtra coast plummet to a very poor category.

"The impact is felt in Mumbai for two days, but the relatively less AQI of Mumbai turned from satisfactory to poor since Friday. It is predicted that the same dust cloud will further intensify with the clouds of Afghanistan and the upper edge of the Thar region of Pakistan and will further deteriorate the AQI for places along the Mumbai - Ahmedabad belt," said Gufran Beig, founder director of SAFAR.

However, due to warmer local conditions, it is likely to subside by Monday, he said.

SAFAR, the System of Air Quality and Weather Forecasting And Research is part of the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune under the Ministry of Earth Science.

As per SAFAR data, on Saturday, Ahmedabad had PM10 concentration at 225 (moderate) while PM2.5 levels were at 120 (poor).

For Mumbai, PM10 was 231 and PM2.5 was 125.

Explaining why Delhi and other parts of NW India received hailstorm and thunderstorm while Ahmedabad and Mumbai got dust storm due to the same Western Disturbance (WD), Beig said: "The wind direction is always towards Mumbai-Ahmedabad corridor whenever there is WD. It brings huge moisture in the northern part of India but nothing in south west India, except fast upper air winds, which are otherwise slow. This high winds pushes dust in that area."

Earlier, in the first week of February, for three days in a row, Mumbai had witnessed very high pollution levels with Air quality Index mostly above 300 with some places recording an AQI of even 400 plus.

This was because of the two back-to-back dust storms that induced worst air quality.

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

Tags: Air conditioningIndian institute of tropical meteorologyGufran beigdelhiNew DelhiThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-west`delhiDelhi capitalSouth delhi district administrationIto delhiGhaziabad district administration
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalIndia-Pakistan Tension: Delhi CM Rekha Gupta Reviews Emergency Preparedness in Hospitals

NationalIndian Railways Launches Special Trains from Udhampur, Jammu to Delhi Amid Rising Tensions Post Operation Sindoor

NationalDelhi To Conduct Air Raid Siren Test at 3 P.M; Public Advised To Stay Calm

NationalDelhi on High Alert: India Gate Evacuated and Security Tightened Amid Rising India-Pakistan Tensions (Watch Video)

NationalDelhi: Man Injured in Road Accident, Driver Suspected to Be Minor; Case Filed

National Realted Stories

NationalDG BSF, personnel pay tribute to martyred soldier killed in Pak cross-border firing in Jammu

NationalSearch op launched to nab intruder after soldier injured in firing at Jammu's Nagrota Army station

NationalPak PM Shehbaz Sharif addresses nation after ceasefire agreement amid violation of deal across LoC, IB

National'War is not India's choice': NSA Doval speaks to Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi amid India-Pak tensions

NationalMP govt to organise regional agri-conclave in Narsinghpur, Satna