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    Death toll rises to 11, searches on for over 40 missing

    • August 5, 2024
    • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
    • Category: DPN Topics
    No Comments

     

     

    Death toll rises to 11, searches on for over 40 missing

    Subject: Geography

    Sec: Climatology

    Context:

    Over 40 people are still missing after a series of cloudbursts occurred in Kullu’s Nirmand, Sainj and Malana, Mandi’s Padhar and Shimla’s Rampur subdivision on the night of July 31 and wreaked havoc.

    Cloudburst:

    • According to the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD),cloudbursts are sudden, heavy rainstorms where more than 10 cm of rain falls in less than an hour over a small area, of about 10 square km. They often happen in mountainous areas, especially in the
    • In the Indian Subcontinent, it generally occurs when a monsoon cloud drifts northwards, from the Bay of Bengal or the Arabian Sea across the plains then on to the Himalaya which sometimes brings 75 mm of rain per hour.
    • Causes:
      • Cloudbursts occur when strong upward currents of hot air prevent raindrops from falling, allowing them to grow larger while new smaller drops form below.
      • This leads to a significant accumulation of water in the atmosphere, which is released abruptly when the upward currents weaken.
      • Cloudbursts frequently occur in the hilly and mountainous areas of the Indian subcontinent, largely due to the region’s complex topography, which facilitates orographic lifting.
        • Orographic lifting occurs when air rises and cools as it travels up the windward side of a mountain.
        • This process enhances cloud development and rainfall as moist air ascends over the mountains, with monsoon dynamics and localised weather patterns further influencing these intense precipitation events.
      • Cloudburst are Different from Rainfall:
        • Rain is condensed water falling from a cloud while cloudburst is a sudden heavy rainstorm.
        • Rain over 10 cm per hour is categorised as a cloudburst.
        • The cloudburst is a natural phenomenon, but occurs quite unexpectedly, very abruptly, and rather drenching.
      • Prediction:
        • There is no satisfactory technique for anticipating the occurrence of cloud bursts through satellites and ground monitoring stations because they develop over a small area and for a period of time.
        • A very fine net work of radars is required to be able to detect the likelihood of a cloud burst and this would be expensive.
        • Much of the damage can be avoided by way of identifying the areas and the meteorological situations that favour the occurrence of cloud bursts.
      • Examples of Cloudbursts:
        • Uttarakhand Cloudburst (July 2021):Devastating cloudbursts in Chamoli, Uttarkashi, and Pithoragarh caused flash floods, landslides, and extensive damage to infrastructure and lives.
        • Himachal Pradesh Cloudburst (August 2020):Cloudbursts in Kullu, Lahaul-Spiti, and Kinnaur triggered landslides and flash floods, damaging roads, bridges, and houses.

    Death toll rises to 11 Geography
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