TIWN

Srinagar, Aug 1 : Jammu and Kashmir's Srinagar city recorded the season's highest maximum and fourth all-time highest maximum temperature of 36.2 degrees Celsius on Sunday, the weather office said, adding the Kashmir Valley has been reeling under an unprecedented heatwave for over two weeks.
"The highest maximum temperature of 38.3 degrees Celsius was recorded on July 10, 1946. The second highest maximum ever recorded was 37 on July 9, 1999, followed by the third-highest 36.6 degrees Celsius in 1997 with the fourth-highest 36.2 degrees Celsius recorded on Sunday," the Met Department said in a statement.
"Qazigund town recorded its highest-ever maximum temperature of 35.6 today, while Kokernag in Anantnag district also recorded the highest-ever maximum temperature of 34.1 today," the statement added.
The Kashmir Valley has been reeling under an unprecedented heat wave, making life difficult for the locals since the last fortnight.
People have been advised to avoid moving out in the open sun from mid-day to late afternoon and also keep themselves sufficiently hydrated.
Potable drinking water shortages have hit almost every city and town in the Kashmir Valley as water level in all rivers, streams, lakes, springs and wells has fallen by approximately 50 per cent.
- Siemens’ net profit drops over 37 pc to Rs 408 crore in March quarter
- Delhi, Mumbai airport operations normal; security checks taking longer
- Adani Green becomes world’s 1st renewable energy IPP to turn water positive
- DB Corp clocks sharp 75 pc decline in Q4 net profit as revenue slips, expenses rise
- India-UK FTA bypasses China’s dependence, navigates US tariffs: SBI report