At least 33 people died and more than 90 were missing yesterday after a monster cyclone slammed India.
The swirling system dubbed Cyclone Tauktae is the latest in what experts say is a growing number of increasingly severe storms in the Arabian Sea as climate change warms its waters.
Hundreds of thousands of people were left without power after the storm hit the Gujarat coast in western India on Monday evening, leaving a trail of death and destruction.
Winds up to 130km per hour smashed seafront windows and knocked over power lines and thousands of trees, blocking roads leading to affected areas, officials said.
“I have never experienced such intensity in my life,” a hotel owner in the town of Bhavnagar said. “It was pitch dark as power was cut off and winds were making a roaring sound. It was scary.”
Prime Minister Narendra Modi was set to visit the cyclone-hit regions in Gujarat, his home state, today.
One support vessel serving oil rigs that were walloped by eight-metre waves off Mumbai sank and 93 of the 273 people who had been on board were missing, the Indian Navy said yesterday.
The defence ministry said 180 people were rescued, with warships attempting to save the rest of the crew in “extremely challenging sea conditions”. Navy helicopters managed, however, to rescue all 137 people stuck on another barge that also slipped its anchor and ran aground.
One other barge and an oil rig were also adrift.
Elsewhere, seven new fatalities took the toll to 33, with most of the deaths occurring when houses or walls collapsed, Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani said.
More than 16,500 houses were damaged, 40,000 trees were uprooted and nearly 6,000 villages were without electricity.
Just over 2,100 villages had their power restored, officials said late yesterday.
Although the cyclone was one of the fiercest in decades, better forecasting than in previous disasters meant that 200,000 people in danger zones were evacuated from their homes.
“Our planning over the last three days has paid off. We have managed to minimise human casualties,” said Rupani.
The cyclone barrelled inland, weakening slightly but still bringing heavy rains and gale-force winds.
Forecasters said it had eased into a deep depression and would further weaken into a depression overnight.
“This is one of the most powerful cyclones we’ve faced in India for decades, and after weeks of chaos and devastating loss of life caused by Covid-19, it could not have come at a worse time,” Save the Children India’s Santanu Chakraborty said in a statement yesterday.
Last May, more than 110 people died after “super cyclone” Amphan ravaged eastern India and Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal.
The Arabian Sea previously experienced fewer severe cyclones than the Bay of Bengal but rising water temperatures because of global warming was changing that, Roxy Mathew Koll from the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology said.
The effects were felt far and wide with authorities in Nepal — some 2,000km from Gujarat — advising climbers on Everest and other mountains to stay put.
But more than 200 climbers ignored the warnings and were heading up the world’s highest mountain, eyeing the summit by the end of this week, a government official at the base camp said.
A car lies crushed under a fallen tree on a road after heavy winds caused by Cyclone Tauktae, in Mumbai, India, yesterday.