Indian
children try to cool off amid soaring temperatures in Allahabad on May 17, 2016
©Sanjay Kanojia (AFP)
|
Temperatures have soared
to a scorching 51 degrees Celsius in one Indian city, meteorologists said
Friday, with the ferocious heat setting a new national record.
AFP
report continues:
Northern
Phalodi wilted as the mercury reached a new high, equivalent to 123.8
Fahrenheit, beating a 60-year-old record.
"Yesterday
(Thursday) was the hottest temperature ever recorded in the country... 51
degrees in Phalodi," said B.P. Yadav, a director of the India
Meteorological Department (IMD).
Hundreds
of people die every year from the heat in India, with May and June usually the
hottest months.
The
latest record high came as the IMD issued warnings of "severe heat
wave" conditions across large parts of India's north and west, including
the capital Delhi, where temperatures hit 47 degrees Celsius earlier this week.
Zoo
animals in the capital were treated to cold baths and given electrolytes to
prevent dehydration.
Demand
for electricity in the city of 25 million people surged to a record high on
Thursday as sweltering residents turned on their air conditioners.
Police
officers on the beat were given oral rehydration solution and special
"cooling scarves" containing water-absorbent crystals to keep their
body temperature down, local papers reported.
-
Drought, forest fires -
The
capital's hospitals have seen a spike in cases of heatstroke, while authorities
in many states have ordered schools to break for summer earlier than normal due
to the heatwave.
Temperatures
in northern India regularly hit the high 40s in May and June, but topping 50
degrees is unusual.
India
declares a heatwave when the maximum temperature reaches 45 degrees Celsius, or
five degrees higher than the average for the area in previous years.
Ahmedabad
city in Gujarat state recorded its hottest day in a century when the mercury
touched 48 degrees Celsius.
The
heatwave comes as India faces its worst water crisis in decades, with about 330
million people, or a quarter of the population, suffering from drought after
two weak monsoons.
Drinking
water is running short in many states and poor rains have prompted extreme
measures, including stationing armed guards at reservoirs and sending water
trains to the worst-affected regions.
Officials
have forecast an above-average monsoon this year, offering hope for the
struggling agriculture sector that employs about 60 percent of the population.
But
the monsoon is only forecast to hit the southern state of Kerala on June 7 --
six days later than usual -- before sweeping across the country.
That
means it will be weeks before the cooling rains reach India's arid plains.
The
dry conditions have aided the spread of forest fires that recently swept
through the hills of northern Uttarakhand and part of Himachal Pradesh states,
which draw tens of thousands of tourists every year.
But
elsewhere in the country there were warnings of floods as Cyclone Roanu
approached the east coast after causing havoc in neighbouring Sri Lanka.
Last year, India suffered one of its deadliest heatwaves in which more than 2,400 people died.
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