Journalism of Courage
Premium

Cyclone Komen to make landfall, heavy rains expected in West Bengal

Wind speed reaching 65­75 kmph gusting to 85 kmph would prevail along and off West Bengal and north Odisha Coasts, MeT office said.

Monsoon, IMD, mumbai monsoon, Dry mumbai, mumbai news
Advertisement

A deep depression over northeast Bay of Bengal today intensified into cyclonic storm ‘Komen’, with the MeT department forecasting heavy to very heavy rains with isolated extremely heavy rains in Gangetic West Bengal. Komen, which lies centred at about 95 km south­southwest of Chittagong in Bangladesh and about 300 km east­southeast of Kolkata, would move northwards and cross Bangladesh Coast by this afternoon, the Met department said.

[related-post]

“After landfall, it will move west­northwestwards and weaken gradually,” it said. “Heavy to very heavy rainfall will occur at a few places with isolated extremely heavy falls over Gangetic West Bengal today and tomorrow,” the Met office said.

Wind speed reaching 65­75 kmph gusting to 85 kmph would prevail along and off West Bengal and north Odisha Coasts, it said.

“Sea conditions will be very rough over north Bay of Bengal.

“Fishermen are advised not to venture into the sea along and off West Bengal and north Odisha coasts,” it said.

In view of the situation, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has cut short her visit to the UK by a day and is coming back to Kolkata by this evening.

The state government has sounded a high alert in all South Bengal districts and has taken necessary precautionary measures to deal with situations arising out of the cyclone.

Story continues below this ad

The metropolis is also likely to be hit by the cyclone and the civic authorities have made necessary arrangements to deal with flooding of streets and low-lying areas in the city.

Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

Tags:
  • Cyclone Komen
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
ExplainedAs OpenAI launches Atlas, why AI firms are betting big on web browsers
X