Travel advisory: IMD warns of dangerous heat across these states, and heavy rain in hill states – What travellers need to know

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 IMD warns of dangerous heat across these states, and heavy rain in hill states – What travellers need to know

As much of India waits for the southwest monsoon to advance further, travellers across large parts of the country are currently dealing with two extremes at once: dangerous heatwave conditions in the north and central regions, and heavy rain warnings in the south and northeast.

The latest bulletin from the India Meteorological Department paints a picture of a week where travel plans may need serious weather-proofing, whether you are heading to the hills, beaches, wildlife parks, or cities.The most pressing concern remains the intense heatwave sweeping across northwest and central India. The IMD has warned that heatwave to severe heatwave conditions are likely to continue over Haryana, Delhi, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Vidarbha, and Coastal Andhra Pradesh through much of the week.

Uttar Pradesh remains under red alert conditions, while several other regions remain on orange alert.

Banda in Uttar Pradesh recorded the country’s highest temperature at a scorching 47.6°C.

IMD weather update

IMD weather update

For travellers, this means daytime sightseeing across north Indian plains could become extremely difficult over the coming days. Popular summer routes through Delhi, Agra, Jaipur, Varanasi, and central Indian destinations may see harsh afternoon conditions, warm nights, and increased risk of dehydration.

IMD has advised people to avoid prolonged heat exposure, drink sufficient water, wear lightweight cotton clothing, and avoid outdoor movement during peak afternoon hours.At the same time, the monsoon story is slowly beginning to unfold over southern waters. The IMD said conditions are favourable for further advance of the southwest monsoon into more parts of the southeast Arabian Sea, Comorin area, Bay of Bengal, and remaining Andaman Sea during the next three to four days.Heavy rainfall activity is expected to intensify across several regions. In the northeast, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, and Sub-Himalayan West Bengal and Sikkim are expected to receive heavy to very heavy rainfall over multiple days. Hill travellers heading towards Darjeeling, Gangtok, Meghalaya, or Arunachal Pradesh may face waterlogging, landslides, and reduced visibility.Southern India is also likely to remain wet and stormy. Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, Telangana, and Rayalaseema are expected to witness widespread rainfall accompanied by thunderstorms and gusty winds.

Kerala and Tamil Nadu are likely to receive heavy rainfall spells well into next week, while parts of Interior Karnataka may experience thundersqualls with wind speeds reaching up to 70 kmph.Beach and island travel could also become risky in parts of Bay of Bengal, Gulf of Mannar, Andaman Sea, Lakshadweep region, and adjoining Arabian Sea areas.Eastern India, including Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha, and West Bengal, is expected to witness thunderstorms, lightning, gusty winds, and isolated heavy rainfall events.

Bihar may receive very heavy rainfall on 24 May, while Gangetic West Bengal could see strong thundersquall activity.The IMD has also warned that heavy rainfall could lead to waterlogging, traffic disruptions, localized flooding, landslides, and damage to vulnerable structures in some regions. Thunderstorms may also result in falling tree branches, temporary power outages, and travel delays.

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