ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Environment

Monsoon likely to hit Kerala on June 1: IMD

New Delhi [India], May 29 (ANI): Anand Sharma, Deputy Director-General, India Meteorological Department (IMD) on Friday said that the monsoon is likely to hit Kerala on June 1.

ANI May 29, 2020 12:17 IST googleads

Anand Sharma, Deputy Director-General, India Meteorological Department speaks to ANI in New Delhi on Friday [Photo/ANI]

New Delhi [India], May 29 (ANI): Anand Sharma, Deputy Director-General, India Meteorological Department (IMD) on Friday said that the monsoon is likely to hit Kerala on June 1.
The IMD further predicted that thunderstorm with light rain would occur over and adjoining areas of Jhajjar, Kharkhoda, Gurugram, Palwal, Hathras, Karnal, Kurukshetra, Mujjafarnagar, Khatauli, Bijnor, and Nazibabad during the next two hours.
The downpour is also likely in adjoining areas of South, South-West, North-West Delhi, and Faridabad today.
Anand Sharma informed that due to the prevalence of Western Disturbance over Himalayan region, the northwestern parts of the country would have temperatures less than 40 degrees Celsius in the coming days.
Maharashtra's Vidarbha and some other areas of the state might have an isolated heat wave today, he added.
"We have said that monsoon will hit Kerala on 1st June, it's a good sign. First week is going to be good for west coast especially up to Maharashtra," he said.
"Heatwave has disappeared from the Northwest part of India. The temperature has come down and for the next 3 to 4 days, it is going to remain below 40 degrees Celsius. After a couple of days, there would be a slight increase in the temperature. In May end we would have pleasant weather," Sharma added.
The advance of the monsoon over Indian mainland is marked by monsoon onset over Kerala and is an important indicator characterising the transition from hot and dry season to a rainy season. As the monsoon progresses northward, relief from scorching summer temperatures is experienced over the areas. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Environment

TN: Customs at Trichy Airport seize gold worth over Rs 1 crores

TN: Customs at Trichy Airport seize gold worth over Rs 1 crores

In two separate incidents Customs officials of Trichy Airport seized gold worth one crore rupees from two male passengers.

Read More
Environment

Plastic waste and "from thin air" clean, sustainable fuels

Plastic waste and

Researchers have shown how carbon dioxide from industrial operations or even straight from the air can be gathered and converted into clean, sustainable fuels using just solar energy. The researchers, from the University of Cambridge, developed a solar-powered reactor that converts captured CO2 and plastic waste into sustainable fuels and other valuable chemical products. In tests, CO2 was converted into syngas, a key building block for sustainable liquid fuels, and plastic bottles were converted into glycolic acid, which is widely used in the cosmetics industry.

Read More
Environment

Method creates window to study distribution of elements in plants

Method creates window to study distribution of elements in plants

Plant roots are crucial in the uptake, selection, enrichment, and retention of a variety of mineral elements, which supply distant plant tissues with nutrients and sequesters excess metals. A variety of ion transporters found at roots mediate the absorption, efflux, and intracellular compartmentalization of various mineral elements to carry out such element-specific tasks.

Read More
Environment

Early warning system based on AI can classify tsunami risk

Early warning system based on AI can classify tsunami risk

In Physics of Fluids, by AIP Publishing, researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles and Cardiff University in the U.K. developed an early warning system that combines state-of-the-art acoustic technology with artificial intelligence to immediately classify earthquakes and determine potential tsunami risk.

Read More
Environment

New ways discovered to estimate long-term coastal cliff loss

New ways discovered to estimate long-term coastal cliff loss

The work was conducted in Del Mar, California, a beach town in San Diego County with infrastructure atop its coastal bluffs.

Read More
Environment

Temperature dominant factor in dissolved oxygen in U.S. Rivers

Temperature dominant factor in dissolved oxygen in U.S. Rivers

Oxygen concentration is an important measure of water quality because fish and other aquatic organisms require dissolved oxygen to breathe, according to Wei Zhi, assistant research professor of civil and environmental engineering and first author of the study, recently published in Nature Water.

Read More
Environment

Housing plays key role in disaster preparedness: Study

Housing plays key role in disaster preparedness: Study

But a new national study found that housing is also important before disasters happen: People with homes not meeting federal quality classifications and those who are housing insecure tend to be less prepared to face natural calamities.

Read More
Environment

Change in temperature risks bees prone to pesticides: Study

Change in temperature risks bees prone to pesticides: Study

Certain pesticides, particularly a class called neonicotinoids, are known to impact bees and other important insects, and are thought to be contributing to population declines. However, bees' reported responses to this threat across the world often seem to vary, suggesting other interacting factors are at play.

Read More
Environment

Activity deep in Earth affects the global magnetic field

Activity deep in Earth affects the global magnetic field

New research from geophysicists at the University of Leeds suggests that the way this super-hot core is cooled is key to understanding the causes of the peculiarities -- or anomalies, as scientists call them -- of the Earth's magnetic field.

Read More
Environment

Endangered Bahamas bird may be lost from island

Endangered Bahamas bird may be lost from island

The endangered Bahama Warbler may be surviving on just one island following Hurricane Dorian's devastation in 2019, according to researchers at the University of East Anglia. A new study shows the bird's distribution and ecology in Grand Bahama before the hurricane struck.

Read More