4 Degree Never Seen Cold Wave Forecast For North India

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For North India, a never-before-seen 4-degree cold wave is predicted.

The IMD had forecast that people of Northwest India will only see brief reprieve from the agonising cold this week after bone-chilling evenings for the previous several weeks.

New Delhi:

A meteorological specialist has projected that even when temperatures in North India momentarily rise this week, January 2023 may still go down as the region's coldest month, with lows of -4 degrees Celsius expected in the plains the following week.

Navdeep Dahiya, the founder of Live Meteorological of India, an online weather company, stated that severe chills are expected between January 14 and 19 and would likely be at their height from January 16 to 18.

In addition, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has warned that cold wave conditions are quite possible in isolated areas over Delhi and its neighbouring states starting Saturday, even if moderate rain in the capital may provide some relief from frigid temperatures for a few days.

The weatherman spoke of maximum temperatures in the single digits and "frosty mornings" or "coldblast" days, however he tempered his predictions by adding there may be some adjustments to the outcome with three days left and fog playing a vital part.

Also, bear in mind that there are still 11 days left in January and that the upcoming few days are predicted to be extremely cold. Could January 2023 go down in history as the coldest month ever—possibly for the entirety of the 20th century so far? Mr.

The IMD had forecast that people of Northwest India will only see brief reprieve from the agonising cold this week after bone-chilling evenings for the previous several weeks.

Up to Friday, a 2-4 degree Celsius spike in low temperatures was forecast over the northern and western plains due to an active western disturbance. However, it foreshadowed a subsequent new blast of arctic frost in the national capital.

After experiencing its third-worst cold wave in 23 years just a few days prior, Delhi's lowest temperature on Thursday was 9.3 degrees Celsius, which is two degrees above the seasonal normal. The IMD predicts that the highest temperature will be close to 19 degrees Celsius.

"A similar circumstance occurred in 2006, when 1.9 degrees was the lowest temperature ever recorded."

"A similar occurrence occurred in 2006, when 1.9 degrees Celsius was the lowest temperature ever recorded." According to RK Jenamani, a meteorological expert at IMD, "there was a comparable cold period in 2013."

The Western UP, North Rajasthan, Chandigarh, Punjab, Haryana, and Delhi, according to Mr. Jenamani, might also receive drizzle and light rain during the ensuing several days.

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