advertisement
The ongoing unprecedented heatwave in Maharashtra – with mercury rising to 46 degrees Celsius in some areas – has claimed at least 25 lives so far, the highest since 2016, with the number of heat-stroke cases standing at around 375, officials said on Monday, 2 May.
The state Health Department's Surveillance Officer Dr Pradeep Awate said that with the temperatures soaring to record highs in the past 100 years, Maharashtra has witnessed the highest – 25 – fatalities due to the heatwave, with many more suffering.
"Chandrapur is among the global hotspots with temperatures hovering around 46 degrees Celsius," Awate told IANS.
Ironically, the usually cool hill-station of Mahabaleshwar – where people from all over the state flock during summer – has become a furnace at 31 degrees, while its neighbouring twin, Panchgani recorded 32 degrees. Yet, they are the "coolest" locales in the state.
Large parts of the state have been reeling under temperatures between 35 and 46 degrees since March-end, particularly northern and central parts of the state besides the traditional hotspots of Marathwada and Vidarbha boiling between 40 degrees Celsius to 46 degrees Celsius.
Of the 25 heatwave fatalities, 15 have been reported from Vidarbha, comprising 11 in Nagpur, three in Akola, and one in Amravati districts, six deaths from Marathwada comprising two from Jalna and one each from Parbhani, Hingoli, Osmanabad and Aurangabad, and four from Jalgaon in north Maharashtra.
All deaths are analysed by the respective District Health Committee based on the victim's symptoms, his/her exposure to heat, the temperature-humidity levels of the past 72 hours where the death occurred before the cause is attributed to the heatwave or a heat-stroke.
Dr Awate said that prior to the onset of summer, the Health Department was ready with its health contingency plan in February and it monitors the daily temperatures from the IMD which is passed to the districts for further remedial measures.
The heatwave has increased the demand for power to its highest ever, at 28,276 MW – and the state reeled under long hours of load-shedding for two weeks till normal supply was restored on 28 April, according to Energy Minister Dr Nitin Raut.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)