Yesterday
evening/night Thunderstorm lashed many parts of western Maharashtra Districts,
Ghats section, interior Konkan & isolated part of Marathwada region.
Some
Rainfall ending 8.30am today (05-11-18):
Ahmednagar
Dist data in mms:
Akole
150
Rajur
58
Sakirwadi 48
Ghargaon 47
Kopargaon
41
Kotul 40
Dolasane
40
Samsherpur
39
Shiblapur
34
Pimparane
32
Puntamba
29
Brahamwada
28
Sangamner
26
Virgaon
26
Samnapur
25
Aashwi
22
Sakur
21
Dhandarphal
20
Talegaon
20
Wadala
20
Rawande
17
Pohegaon
16
Manikdhondi
15
Shirdi
14
Palashi
13
Babhaleshwar
12
Kedgaon
11
Loni
11
Sonai
11
Nalegaon
10
Aurangabad
district:
Siddhanath
50
Khandala
35
Loni
26
Borsar
24
Lasurgaon
24
Ladgaon
20
Harsul
19
Vaijapur
15
Mahalgaon
10
Shendurwada
10
Nashik
dist in mms:
Devla
41
Warkheda
40
Chalisgaon (Jalgaon) 17
Malegaon
14
Ghats
& Surroundings in mms:
Mulshi
dam 75
Wadiwale
50
Pawana
dam 49
Ahupe
48
Pimpalgaon
joga dam 45
Khandala
45
Kamshet
45
Wadeshwar
45
Bamnoli
36
Wadaj
35
Andhra
dam 33
Chakasman
28
Davdi
25
Pratapgad
19
Matheran
17
Mahabaleshwar
15
Manikdoh
dam 14
Dimbhe dam 14
Kalmodi 13
Dhom
Balkawadi 10
Interior
Konkan in mms:
Kalkawne
60
Badlapur
55
Chiplun
52
Shirgaon
35
Hamarapur
35
Kamrali
28
Patpanhale
28
Karjat
26
Amberi
25
Dhasai
23
Dehari
21
Saralgaon
17
Sawantwadi
15
Murbad
15
Nhyadi
13
Mandangad
11
Khed
10
Some inputs helped by Vagarian Shivkumar
8 comments:
Seems NorthEast Monsoon instead of giving rains to south east India is giving rains to Maharashtra! Hope it is not repeat of 2013 - all systems results in duds and rained only in NE India and Maharashtra resulting in terrible drought for Tamil Naidu and Andhra Pradesh.
After this round of rains the Maharashtra rainfall is 78% below normal from 1st October till date. The case of North East India is similar.
It is not a case of rain getting diverted from one place to another, the rainfall since September is way below normal almost everywhere.
Refer to link
http://hydro.imd.gov.in/hydrometweb/(S(a1prkj45kpeqkm45db3220jt))/PdfPageImage.aspx?imgUrl=PRODUCTS\Rainfall_Maps\Cumulative\State_Rainfall_Map\STATE_RAINFALL_MAP_COUNTRY_INDIA_cd.JPG&landingpage=other
Credit Australian government bureau of meteorology
Issued 7 November 2018
The latest ENSO Wrap-Up and Climate Model Summary are now available on the Bureau's website.
El Niño ALERT continues; positive Indian Ocean Dipole
The tropical Pacific Ocean continues developing towards El Niño, while in the Indian Ocean, a positive Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) is underway. The Bureau's ENSO Outlook remains at El Niño ALERT, meaning there is approximately a 70% chance of El Niño occurring in the coming months; about triple the normal likelihood.
Ocean temperature patterns in the Indian Ocean have been at positive IOD levels now for two months. As a result, 2018 will be considered a positive IOD year. A positive IOD during spring increases the chance of below average rainfall for southern and central Australia, and can reinforce the effects of a developing, or fully formed, El Niño. El Niño effects in Australia over summer include higher fire risk, greater chance of heatwaves, and fewer tropical cyclones.
Sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific Ocean have warmed to El Niño levels over the past fortnight. However, atmospheric indicators of El Niño are largely near normal, suggesting that the ocean and atmosphere are not yet reinforcing each other, or 'coupled'. This reinforcement is critical in any El Niño developing and becoming self-sustaining.
International climate models suggest further warming of the tropical Pacific Ocean is likely, increasing the possibility of coupling occurring in the coming months. Seven out of eight climate models suggest sea surface temperatures will remain above El Niño thresholds until at least March 2019.
Model outlooks suggest the positive IOD will decay during November. IOD events typically have little influence on Australian climate from December to April.
More information
Media enquiries: (03) 9669 4057 media@bom.gov.au
Next update expected on 20 November 2018
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Wishing Rajesh sir and entire Vagaries team a very
"HAPPY DIWALI"🎆🎇❤️
This year's northeast monsoon for Chennai ..might end up on a deficit note . the
useless NEM system - not a single drop has fallen over TN,AP.
Arjun: Happy Divali..Seems that many conditions are not favouring the NEM this year. After a poor onset, not enough pulses and systems are originating in the Bay. The creation of systems "in stu" are not favorable and the South China Sea memento is weak.
May be possible that a few WDs will make the winter in the NW and North revive after good snows around 4th November. A couple of WDs will change the scene. We will see drops in the minimum temps inn N/NW and Central India.
The Bay Low has formed and seems on the way to deepen. Will get well marked and deepen more as it tracks towards the TN coastline. Dry weekend for the sub continent with lows around 10c in the plains of North India and 20-22 c in Mumbai, warm day at 35/36c for Mumbai... and 14/15c minimum in Pune.
Mandla in M.P. dropped to 6c on Friday morning and Khajuraho to 7c. Alwar was 8c...
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