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Yellow alert issued, expect rain today, says met dept

Yellow alert issued, expect rain today, says met dept

Time of India30-06-2025
Ludhiana: While the rain on Sunday night and Monday morning cooled the city down, the Met department issued a yellow alert for heavy rain in Ludhiana on Tuesday. It started raining in Ludhiana late on Sunday evening and continued raining intermittently throughout the night.
According to the meteorological department, the city received 14.4 millimetres of rain between 8.30am on Sunday and 8.30am on Monday. There was no rain between 8.30am and 5.30pm on Monday.
The impact of the rainfall and cloudy weather was witnessed on maximum (day) temperature, which was recorded at 30.6 degrees Celsius, which is 4.5 degrees less than normal and 1.4 degrees less than the day before. Minimum temperature was recorded at 25.6 degrees Celsius on Monday, which is a degree less than normal and 0.6 degrees more than the day before.
According to the meteorological department website, generally cloudy weather with a few spells of rain or thundershowers is expected on Tuesday and Wednesday, whereas partly cloudy sky with one or two spells of rain or thundershowers is expected on Thursday and Friday. Day temperature is expected to be recorded at 32 degrees Celsius on Tuesday and Wednesday and 33 degrees Celsius on Thursday and Friday. Minimum (night) temperature is expected to be recorded at 25 degrees Celsius on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday and increase to 26 degrees Celsius on Friday.
MSID:: 122160637 413 |
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Wildfire burns through northern suburb of Greece's capital Athens and residents are told to evacuate
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Cast-off capital
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The Hindu

time3 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Cast-off capital

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Then, laughing ironically, adds, 'Imagine people in Delhi who have to drink this contaminated water.' In March 2025, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his 'Mann Ki Baat' broadcast, spoke about the problem of textile waste. 'Several start-ups have started working on textile recovery facilities…. some cities are creating new identities in dealing with textile waste. Panipat is emerging as a global hub of textile recycling,' he had said. Garg says his father was the first to set up a spinning mill in Panipat in 1981. Two to three more mills came up in the city over the next two decades, but the boom came in the early 2000s with technological advancement. 'Only 10-15 tonnes of scrap could be processed daily at these units earlier. But high-speed spinning mills equipped with the latest technology process around 100-125 tonnes of scrap daily,' he says, in his expansive office, adding that almost 90% of the imported scraps end up in Panipat. 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Yamuna Bachao Abhiyan convener Shiv Singh Rawat says that scores of dyeing and bleaching units in Panipat functioning without clearances and treatment infrastructure discharge acidic, chlorine-laced waste water into the river. 'The discharge either flows through sewer lines or is dumped via tankers into open land. Ultimately it ends up in the Yamuna through Drain No. 2. The visual discolouration of the water at the point of merger of Drain No. 2 and the Yamuna is a stark indicator of the contamination,' he says. Multiple water sample reports of Drain No. 2 by the HSPCB Laboratory in April this year confirm that several parameters were much higher than the permissible levels fixed by the Central Pollution Control Board. For instance, Biological Oxygen Demand was at 68 mg/l, with the maximum level set at 30 mg/l; Chemical Oxygen Demand was at 284 mg/l, while it should have been no more than 50 mg/l; and Total Dissolved Solids were at 1,858 mg/l, with the cut-off at 500 mg/l. 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Following media reports, the National Green Tribunal has taken suo motu cognisance of the illegal bleaching units and issued notices to the HSPCB and Panipat Deputy Commissioner, among others, directing them to file an affidavit a week before the hearing on August 29. HSPCB Regional Officer, Panipat, Bhupinder Singh Chahal says the department has ordered closure of 20 units and sent show-cause notices to a dozen more a month ago. Chahal, however, says the department does not have the figure for the illegal units. Dip in demand Two types of cloth waste are imported: cloth scraps and second-hand clothes. The majority of godowns on Barsat Road, where they are concentrated, deal in scraps. These are bought by spinning mills to be made into yarn. Ramjan, a worker at a warehouse on Barsat Road, says his employer imports 30 tonnes of cloth each season, mostly from Korea and China, both before the onset of summer and winter. 'The scraps are sold for ₹20 a kg. 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