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HomeIndiaMumbai struggles with heaviest monsoon downpour since 2005

Mumbai struggles with heaviest monsoon downpour since 2005

Mumbai's civic administration declared a holiday on Tuesday as it recorded the second-heaviest rainfall in the past 24 hours, leading to delays in trains and flights.

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New Delhi: The heaviest downpour since 2005 inundated Mumbai, delaying trains and planes and spurring the city administration to declare a holiday.

Flights to Mumbai were delayed, diverted or canceled after a Boeing Co. 737 aircraft operated by SpiceJet Ltd. overshot the runway amid heavy rains. Precipitation over the past 24 hours was the second-heaviest on record, said K.S. Hosalikar, deputy director general at the India Meteorological Department’s Mumbai center.

“It is very unsafe to go out,” Mahesh Palawat, a vice president of meteorology and climate change at weather forecaster Skymet, said in a Twitter post. “Nothing is more important than your safety.”

Disruptions due to seasonal rains, which also affected train services, are a regular occurrence in Mumbai, as authorities in the mega city of 18 million grapple with crumbling infrastructure. Sixteen people were killed in a suburb of the city when a wall collapsed, according to NDTV. The city’s travails highlight the need for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to accelerate the $1.44 trillion his party pledged to spend on building roads, railways and other infrastructure in Asia’s third-largest economy.

At least 54 flights were diverted since the SpiceJet incident late on Monday, a spokeswoman for the airport said, while 52 were canceled to and from India’s second-busiest airport on Tuesday morning. Vistara, the local affiliate of Singapore Airlines Ltd., scrapped at least 10 flights and market leader IndiGo and SpiceJet warned of delays and diversions in Mumbai, home to the the nation’s two largest stock exchanges and the central bank.

About 1,000 people were evacuated from an area in Mumbai as a river started to overflow, the city council’s monsoon helpline said on Twitter. Mumbai’s Santacruz weather station recorded 35 centimeters of rain in 24 hours that ended at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, the heaviest since 2005, said Hosalikar. Rains will continue for the next 24 hours, he said.

On the National Stock Exchange, trading was about 4% more than the 30-day average for the time of the day for companies on the NSE 50 Nifty Index, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Volumes were low in the nation’s fixed income market, according to traders.
“Volumes have been low, thus I am deducing office presence may be low too,” said Naveen Singh, head of fixed-income trading at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership.

The yield on benchmark 10-year bonds fell two basis points to 6.86% on Tuesday. The benchmark S&P BSE Sensex index fell 0.3% at 11:25 a.m. in Mumbai, while the rupee was little changed at 68.98 against the dollar. –Bloomberg


Also read: India’s longer summers & delayed monsoons are partly due to retreating Himalayan glaciers


 

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