Cyclone Shakhti: IMD issues warning for Mahararashtra
IMD has issued cyclone 'Shakti' warning for some districts of Maharashtra, with high to moderate cyclone warning between 3 and 7 October.
Agencies
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Fishermen have been warned not to venture into the sea.
New Delhi, 4 Oct
Cyclone Shakhti, the first cyclonic storm of the post-monsoon season in the Arabian Sea, is churning up the sea, packing a wind speed of 100 kmph and gusting, officials said on Saturday. Meanwhile, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued cyclone 'Shakti' warning for some districts of Maharashtra, with high to moderate cyclone warning between 3 and 7 October.
Shakhti, which has intensified into a severe cyclonic storm, was moving further into the Arabian Sea and lay centred about 420 km away from Dwarka in Gujarat, the weather office said.
It is likely to move west-southwestwards and reach the northwest and adjoining west-central Arabian Sea by Sunday, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said, adding that Shakhti will recurve and move east-northeastwards from Monday morning, weakening gradually.
According to the IMD's release, the warning covers Mumbai, Thane, Palghar, Raigad, Ratnagiri, and Sindhudurg. The wind speed, reaching 45-55 kmph and gusting to 65 kmph, is likely to prevail over the North Maharashtra coast between 3 and 5 October.
Under the influence of the cyclonic storm, sea conditions are likely to be rough to very rough along and off the Gujarat-North Maharashtra coast and the Pakistan coast until Sunday.
The IMD has further forecast heavy to very heavy rains in the interior parts of Maharashtra, particularly in East Vidarbha and parts of Marathwada, with a possibility of flooding in the low-lying areas of North Konkan due to intense cloud formation and infiltration of moisture into the atmosphere.
In recent years, storms like Tauktae (2021) and Biparjoy
(2023) have formed in the Arabian Sea, which has witnessed fewer cyclones
compared to the Bay of Bengal.
The cyclone has been named Shakhti, a name suggested by Sri
Lanka as per the convention followed by the WMO/ESCAP Panel on Tropical
Cyclones. The names of the cyclones are suggested by 13 countries in the Bay of
Bengal and the Arabian Sea rim.
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