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After nearly two months, rain & snow break prolonged dry spell in Kashmir

IANS February 20, 2025 174 views

Kashmir experienced a significant break in its prolonged dry spell with widespread rainfall and snowfall across the region. The precipitation brings relief to locals who had been experiencing water scarcity and reduced hydroelectric power generation. Meteorological experts predict more rain and snow in the coming days, which could help replenish water reservoirs critical for summer months. The return of precipitation offers hope for restoring perennial springs and mitigating potential water shortages.

"Today's rain/snow has broken the extended dry spell." - Mukhtar Ahmad, MET Department Director
Srinagar, Feb 20: After 50 days, the prolonged dry spell broke in Kashmir Valley on Thursday as rain lashed the plains and higher reaches recorded snowfall.

Key Points

1

Widespread rain lashes Kashmir plains after 50-day drought

2

Hydroelectric power generation dropped 80% during dry spell

3

Winter games in Gulmarg postponed due to lack of snow

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Weather forecast predicts more precipitation from Feb 26-28

Widespread jubilation started across Kashmir when people woke up as rain lashed the plains after such a long period.

Scores of springs dried up and power generation from hydroelectric power projects dropped by 80 per cent due to the dry spell.

Authorities postponed the 'Khelo India 2025' winter games scheduled in the ski resort of Gulmarg due to scant snowfall.

MET Department Director Mukhtar Ahmad told IANS: "Today's rain/snow has broken the extended dry spell. This will lead to increased discharge in rivers and streams in the coming days. If the present weather model holds, Jammu and Kashmir will have more rain and snow between February 26 to February 28. The present model indicates the forecast to have a strong probability."

Locals have been praying for rainfall and expecting it would restore the perennial springs that had dried up and help those witnessing very low water discharge.

Srinagar recorded 4.4 degrees Celsius minimum temperature, Gulmarg minus 2.8 degrees Celsius and Pahalgam 1.2 degrees Celsius. Jammu city recorded 11.9 degrees Celsius minimum temperature, Katra town 9 degrees Celsius, Batote 3.7 degrees Celsius, Banihal 2.4 degrees Celsius and Bhaderwah 4.4 degrees Celsius.

Usually, all the perennial water reservoirs of Jammu and Kashmir up in the mountains get replenished by heavy snowfall during the winter months. This replenishment of perennial water reservoirs sustains rivers, streams, springs, lakes and other water bodies in Jammu and Kashmir during the hot summer months.

Less or no snowfall during the winter spells disaster leading to water shortages in the summer months.

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