Yamuna Flowing Under Warning Mark In Delhi However Water Stage Steadily Receding

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Yamuna Flowing Below Warning Mark In Delhi But Water Level Gradually Receding


The warning stage is 204.50 metres and the hazard mark is 205.33 metres.

New Delhi:

The water stage of the Yamuna was receding steadily and the river was flowing beneath the warning mark in Delhi, officers mentioned on Monday.

“The water stage was recorded at 203.95 metres on the Outdated Railway Bridge at 9 am. It was 203.98 metres at 9 am on Sunday and 204.14 metres at 7 pm on Saturday,” an official of the Irrigation and Flood Management Division mentioned.

The warning stage is 204.50 metres and the hazard mark is 205.33 metres.

Water was being launched into the Yamuna on the fee of three,666 cusecs at 9 am from the Hathni Kund barrage in Haryana”s Yamunanagar district. The circulate fee was eight,208 cusecs at midnight, the utmost within the final 24 hours.

“The circulate fee has remained beneath 15,000 cusecs during the last three days, which isn’t very excessive. The water stage is receding steadily,” the official mentioned. A cusec is equal to 28.32 litres per second.

The water discharged from the barrage, which supplies ingesting water to Delhi, usually takes two-three days to achieve the capital.

The water stage rose on Friday as a result of rain in Delhi and neighbouring areas, he mentioned.

The administration has deployed 24 boats, every with two divers, to observe the state of affairs. Extra boats and groups of divers are on standby.

Usually, the circulate fee on the Hathni Kund barrage is 352 cusecs, however the discharge is elevated after heavy rainfall in catchment areas.

Final 12 months, the circulate fee had peaked to eight.28 lakh cusecs on August 18-19 and the water stage of the Yamuna had breached the hazard mark and hit 206.60 metres.

The Delhi authorities needed to launch evacuation and aid operations after the overflowing river submerged many low-lying areas.

In 1978, the river had swelled to an all-time report stage of 207.49 metres. In 2013, it had risen to 207.32 metres. 



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