Finally the monsoon has hit Delhi-NCR, the MeT department said on Sunday.
Even as the city had seen overcast conditions and rain in the past few days and record rainfall in a decade this June, it wasn’t monsoon. The official date for arrival of the monsoon in Delhi is June 29.
On Sunday morning, however, MeT officials declared that the monsoon has hit Delhi as “southwest monsoon has further advanced into some more parts of Rajasthan and Himachal Pradesh, remaining parts of Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, entire National Capital region NCR (Delhi) and some parts of Haryana.”
Till 8.30 in the morning, 20.4 mm of rainfall was recorded while the minimum temperature was 26.4 degrees celsius.
According to a Met official, a western disturbance will ensure similar rain in Delhi for two more days at a stretch.
“The monsoon arrived in east UP yesterday. Today, it arrived in west UP and Delhi NCR. For the next two days, this rain will continue due to a western disturbance. After that, there are forecasts of light rain,” a MeT official told HT.
This year, monsoon in Delhi arrived a few days late. Sometimes the monsoon current is strong enough and advances on its own. But at times it needs some “push” or a “drag” to advance over the Indian landmass. Certain atmospheric conditions such as a cyclonic circulation, a low pressure or a depression in the sea provide this push.
Water logging was reported from many areas in south Delhi. However, being a Sunday with minimal vehicular movement compared to weekdays, not many traffic snarls were reported.