New Delhi: Thirteen days before cyclone ‘Fani’ hit the Odisha coast, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) had an indication that the low pressure in the Bay of Bengal and the Equatorial Indian Ocean could balloon into a massive storm and started preparing for the onslaught, the weatherman said, Sunday.
The IMD had predicted April 21, based on data from various sources, that conditions were conducive for formation of a low-pressure area in the Equatorial Indian Ocean and south Bay of Bengal. A low-pressure area is the initial stage of the formation of a cyclone.
Armed with data from different institutes of the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), the meteorologists deliberated on how low pressure could pan out to be. The IMD and other institutes of the MoES ran data through 10 specialised weather models.
“We realised all the models suggested that it was going to turn into a cyclone. So, from April 25 we started issuing special bulletins,” IMD’s additional director general (services) Mritunjay Mohapatra told this agency. Mohapatra, a veteran in tracking cyclones, played a critical role in tracking Fani’s progress and accurately predicting its path. Elaborating on the formation stage of cyclone ‘Fani’, he said help from other institutes of the MoES played a crucial role in predicting the development of the cyclone.
The National Institute of Ocean Technology (NIOT), Chennai has over 20 buoys in the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea that collected data on rainfall, temperatures below the sea and above, wind speed, Mohaptara stated.
Satellite data was also used in running the models. “There are island observatories that fed us with data also,” Mohapatra said.
Different satellites provided data and images on clouds in oceanic area for monitoring low pressure systems, said IMD’s director general KJ Ramesh. He stated that data was processed under different weather models by the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune and National Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (NCMRWF), Noida. These two institutes have two supercomputers that process data.
The IMD also used its radars at Chennai, Karikal, Machilipatnam, Visakhapatnam, Gopalpur, Paradip, Kolkata, Agartala to the fullest. “Twelve hours before the landfall, we kept sending updates on locations to concerned states every half hour using our radars, besides releasing hourly bulletins,” Ramesh informed.
‘Fani’ intensified into a cyclone, April 27. It became a ‘severe cyclonic storm’, April 29 and into a ‘very severe cyclone’ the next day. A day later, it took the form of an ‘extremely severe cyclone’ and slammed into the Odisha coast May 3 with a speed gusting to 175 kilometres per hour.
The IMD also earned praised from different quarters of the world for its predictions.