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Sensor error means New Delhi heatwave record overstated by 3C | India

Sensor error means New Delhi heatwave record overstated by 3C | India

A record temperature registered this week for the Indian capital of 52.9C (127.22F) was too high by 3C, the Indian government has said.

The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) had investigated Wednesday’s reading by the weather station at Mungeshpur, a densely packed corner of New Delhi, “and found a 3C sensor error”, the earth sciences minister, Kiren Rijiju, said.

“Corrective measures are now in place,” the minister said, sharing the conclusion of a draft report about the all-time high reading on X. He did not give a corrected figure for Wednesday’s temperature.

The IMD said the maximum temperature reported by the Mungeshpur weather station “is not correct due to malfunctioning of the sensor”.

However, the city’s record for heat still appears to have been broken. Two weather stations in the capital reported temperatures of 49C (120.2F) and 49.1C (120.38F) for Wednesday. The IMD said these two stations had been checked and it did not report any sensor errors. The highest temperature previously recorded in New Delhi was 48.4C (119.12F) in May 1998, the draft IMD report said.

Severe heat has been affecting parts of India for days. On Friday, at least 33 people, including election officials on duty, died of suspected heatstroke in the states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in the north, and Odisha in the east.


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