Mumbai: Mumbai city and suburbs are witnessing incessant rainfall from Monday night and following the intensified downpour on Tuesday morning, the weather department has issued a Nowcast warning that for moderate to heavy spells of rain are very likely in the districts of Mumbai and Thane. "Possibility of thunder/lightning accompanied with gusty winds in some areas. Take precautions while moving out," the warning added.
The Nowcast warning was issued at 10.30 am and is valid for the next four hours.
IMD has now upgraded Yellow alert to Orange alert (Heavy to Very heavy rainfall) for Mumbai.
The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) had placed the entire Konkan region, including Mumbai, Thane, Palghar, Raigad and Ratnagiri under Yellow Alert for heavy rainfall in Monday and no alert was issued for Tuesday. However, the heavy downpour since morning has taken the office goers to surprise.
‘4 RDX IED Bombs Placed In Tower...': Bombay Stock Exchange Receives Bomb Threat; FIR RegisteredOn Monday, the city area received 19 mm rainfall, the weather eastern suburbs recieved 35 mm and the western suburbs recieved 33 mm of rainfall.
In the last 12 hours, the some of the areas which have recieved the highest rainfall included: Chembur (67 mm), BKC (68 mm), Santacruz (60 mm), Pali Hill (68 mm), Vile Parle (35 mm) among others.
In view of the heavy rain across Mumbai city and suburbs, citizens are requested to avoid visiting coastal and low-lying areas. Our officials and staff are alert and ready to assist Mumbaikars. Dial 100 / 112 / 103 in case of any emergency, said Mumbai Police
You may also like
John Stones on six-player Man City exit list after ruthless Pep Guardiola demand
EAM Jaishankar raises Pahalgam attack at SCO meeting, calls for 'uncompromising position' on combatting terrorism
Himadri Speciality Chemical's revenue declines over 6.8 pc in Q1
GK Barry's £89 Wimbledon sunglasses 'look so expensive' and 'don't get caught in your hair'
CEO forgets to send job interview invite, calls it a 'hiring hack'. Internet claps back: 'Respect should go both ways'