The national capital was gripped by relentless dry winds and piercing heat on Monday, turning the city into a virtual furnace as maximum temperatures breached the 44 degrees Celsius mark in several localities. Residents are now bracing for an extended period of punishing summer conditions over the coming week.
According to the official weather department, Delhi’s base station at Safdarjung registered a maximum temperature of 43.4 degrees Celsius, which is 3 degrees higher than the seasonal normal. Meanwhile, the minimum temperature settled at 26.3 degrees Celsius. Although official heatwave criteria were not formally declared for the entire city, Monday marked the hottest day in May since 2024. The previous high for the month was observed on May 17, 2024, when the temperature reached 43.6 degrees Celsius.
Localized temperatures surge beyond 44 degrees
Among regional tracking stations, Ridge recorded the highest temperature at 44.6 degrees Celsius (3.1 degrees above normal). It was closely followed by Ayanagar at 44.4 degrees Celsius, Lodhi Road at 43.8 degrees Celsius, and Palam at 43.5 degrees Celsius. The minimum temperatures across most suburban pockets hovered around 26 degrees Celsius, aligning mostly with seasonal expectations.
The weather office has forecast sustained heatwave conditions across northwestern and central India. The capital is expected to see temperatures fluctuate between 43 and 45 degrees Celsius. Formally, a heatwave is logged when maximum temperatures cross 40 degrees Celsius and remain 4.5 to 6.4 degrees above normal for a continuous duration. A yellow alert remains active for Tuesday, with expectations of a maximum temperature of 44 degrees Celsius and a minimum around 28 degrees Celsius.
Thar Desert winds trap heat over Delhi-NCR
Independent weather experts stated that intense northwesterly winds traveling from Rajasthan’s Thar Desert and parts of central Pakistan are driving the surge. As these winds cross large arid stretches, they turn exceptionally dry, trapping heat near the ground surface and escalating local conditions.
Experts also noted that elevated night temperatures are a result of severe daytime heating. Because the ground lacks sufficient time to release the stored heat overnight, nights remain uncomfortably warm. With no forecast for thunderstorms or pre-monsoon showers over the next 10 days, the dry spell is likely to persist, heightening the risk of heat-related illnesses and sunstrokes.
Furthermore, environmental researchers highlighted that according to district-level vulnerability assessments, more than half of Delhi’s districts face a very high to extreme risk from heat. The lack of nighttime cooling reduces the human body’s capacity to recover from daytime thermal stress. On the environmental front, the city’s air quality index (AQI) was recorded at 173, remaining in the ‘moderate’ category.