All Schools Ordered Shut In Odisha District After Heavy Rainfall

Heavy rainfall continued to lash across Odisha as a well-marked low-pressure area in the Bay of Bengal first intensified into a depression and later into a deep depression.

All Schools Ordered Shut In Odisha District After Heavy Rainfall
Schools in Odisha’s Balangir district will remain closed on August 2 due to heavy rainfall. (Photo: Pixabay)

New Delhi: All schools including government, private and Anganwadis have been ordered shut in Odisha’s Balangir district amid heavy rainfall alert. Heavy rain continued to lash across Odisha as a well-marked low-pressure area in the Bay of Bengal first intensified into a depression and later into a deep depression on Tuesday.

“In view of the heavy rainfall alert, all government and private schools and Anganwadis in Balangir district will remain closed today,” the administration said in a statement, according to news agency ANI.

Heavy Rainfall Alert In Odisha

Odisha received heavy rainfall due to the prevailing weather conditions, with the state capital Bhubaneswar witnessing a record rainfall of 259.2 mm in the last 24 hours till 8.30 am on Tuesday.

“This was the highest rainfall Bhubaneswar has received in the month of August to date. It broke the previous record of 254.2 mm of rainfall received on August 20, 1997,” said U S Dash, a scientist at the Regional Meteorological Centre, Bhubaneswar.

A red warning has been issued for Angul, Dhenkanal, Mayurbhanj and Keonjhar and an orange warning for Jajpur, Bhadrak, Deogarh, Sambalpur, Sonepur, Boudh, Sundergarh, Jagatsinghpur, Kendrapara, Cuttack, Khurda, Puri and Balasore.

The weather office said that rough sea conditions will prevail and warned fishermen against venturing into the sea in Odisha till Wednesday afternoon. The depression over the northeastern Bay of Bengal moved north-northwestwards at a speed of 25 kmph, intensifying into a deep depression, and lay centred around 160 km east-southeast of Khepupara in Bangladesh and 420 km east of Digha in West Bengal, the IMD said in its bulletin.

“It is likely to move northwestwards and cross the Bangladesh coast east of Khepupara by Tuesday evening and thereafter move west-northwestwards across Gangetic West Bengal in the next 24 hours,” the bulletin said.

The weather office said that under its impact, squally conditions are likely to prevail, with wind speed reaching 45-55 kmph, gusting up to 65 kmph along and off Bangladesh-West Bengal coasts. The wind speed is likely to increase to 55-65 kmph, gusting to 75 kmph over the next 12 hours.






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