KARACHI: Pakistani authorities issued weather warnings on Wednesday as a new storm system forming over the northeast Arabian Sea threatened to bring rain and strong winds to the southern Sindh province this week, while a separate westerly weather front is forecast to lash Punjab with heavy downpours early next week.
A well-marked low-pressure area over Indiaâs Saurashtra coast has moved westward into the Arabian Sea, about 310 kilometers (192 miles) southeast of Karachi, Pakistanâs largest city and the provincial capital of Sindh, and is expected to intensify into a tropical depression within 12 hours, the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) said.Â
Under its influence, light to moderate rainfall is likely on Tuesday in Karachi and 11 southern Sindh districts including Tharparkar, Umerkot, Badin and Mirpurkhas, accompanied by squally winds of up to 55 kilometers per hour.
âFishermen of Sindh are advised not to venture into deep sea till Oct. 3,â the PMD said in its latest tropical cyclone watch. âThe cyclone warning center in Karachi is monitoring the system and will issue updates accordingly.â
Sea conditions off Sindh are forecast to remain rough to very rough through Thursday, and the agency has cautioned that windstorms and lightning could damage weak structures such as mud-built homes, electric poles, billboards, vehicles and solar panels.
The latest warnings come amid one of Pakistanâs most punishing monsoon seasons in recent years.Â
Since the rains began on June 26, at least 1,006 people have died across the country, with more than 4.7 million affected in Punjab province alone. Flooding has inundated over 4,700 villages and forced the evacuation of more than 2.5 million people, while crops including cotton, rice and sugarcane have been devastated, dealing a blow to the agriculture sector that employs nearly 40 percent of the workforce.
Punjab, Pakistanâs most populous province and agricultural heartland, now faces the prospect of renewed flooding.Â
A strong westerly weather system is forecast to sweep across the upper catchments of all major rivers and the north and northeast of the province from October 5 to 7, bringing heavy to very heavy rainfall and thunderstorms, the Punjab Disaster Management Authority said.Â
Authorities have been placed on high alert amid fears that additional rainfall could swell rivers and trigger flash floods in vulnerable districts.
Water flows at major barrages on the Indus River â including Guddu, Sukkur and Kotri â remain at normal levels for now, with inflows recorded on Tuesday at 137,332 cubic feet per second (cusecs), 105,430 cusecs and 265,141 cusecs respectively, the PDMA advisory added.Â
Pakistanâs extensive barrage system regulates water flow and irrigation across the Indus basin, but heavy rains can rapidly increase volumes and overwhelm embankments.
Karachi is expected to remain partly cloudy and humid this week, with daytime temperatures of 33â36 degrees Celsius (91â97 Fahrenheit) and isolated drizzle or light rain through Friday, according to the PDMA Sindh.Â
Hot and dry weather is likely to prevail elsewhere in Sindh outside the rain-affected districts.
Provincial disaster authorities in Sindh and Punjab have directed deputy commissioners and local disaster management committees to âremain alert round the clockâ and âtake all necessary mitigation measures,â including round-the-clock monitoring and daily situation reports as the new weather systems approach.