• People in Veraval, in Gujarat, western India, prepare for Cyclone Tauktae by moving a fishing boat inland. Reuters
    People in Veraval, in Gujarat, western India, prepare for Cyclone Tauktae by moving a fishing boat inland. Reuters
  • Cyclone Tauktae is moving northwards in parallel with India’s western coast, bringing heavy rain, thunderstorms and strong wind to several states, the country’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said. AFP
    Cyclone Tauktae is moving northwards in parallel with India’s western coast, bringing heavy rain, thunderstorms and strong wind to several states, the country’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said. AFP
  • A man rides a scooter through a waterlogged street in Mumbai after heavy rainfall from Cyclone Tauktae. AFP
    A man rides a scooter through a waterlogged street in Mumbai after heavy rainfall from Cyclone Tauktae. AFP
  • An Indian Air Force plane prepares to fly National Disaster Response Force staff from Kolkata to western Gujarat state in anticipation of Cyclone Tauktae. AP
    An Indian Air Force plane prepares to fly National Disaster Response Force staff from Kolkata to western Gujarat state in anticipation of Cyclone Tauktae. AP
  • India’s National Disaster Response Force clears trees from a road in Margao, Goa, on Sunday after Cyclone Tauktae caused chaos. AFP
    India’s National Disaster Response Force clears trees from a road in Margao, Goa, on Sunday after Cyclone Tauktae caused chaos. AFP
  • Police and rescue workers help a local resident along a flooded street in a coastal area of Kochi after Cyclone Tauktae caused heavy rain. AFP
    Police and rescue workers help a local resident along a flooded street in a coastal area of Kochi after Cyclone Tauktae caused heavy rain. AFP
  • A woman walks along a road in Mumbai, India, after Cyclone Tauktae caused heavy rain. AFP
    A woman walks along a road in Mumbai, India, after Cyclone Tauktae caused heavy rain. AFP
  • Police and rescue workers evacuate a flooded house in a coastal area of Kochi after Cyclone Tauktae caused heavy rain. AFP
    Police and rescue workers evacuate a flooded house in a coastal area of Kochi after Cyclone Tauktae caused heavy rain. AFP
  • A police officer in Veraval, Gujarat, directs people to leave as waves approach the shore before the arrival of Cyclone Tauktae. Reuters
    A police officer in Veraval, Gujarat, directs people to leave as waves approach the shore before the arrival of Cyclone Tauktae. Reuters
  • A fisherman waits for help as he tries to move a fishing boat to a safer ground on the Arabian Sea coast in Mumbai on Monday. Authorities tried to evacuate hundreds of thousands of people as Cyclone Tauktae moved into India's western coast. AP Photo
    A fisherman waits for help as he tries to move a fishing boat to a safer ground on the Arabian Sea coast in Mumbai on Monday. Authorities tried to evacuate hundreds of thousands of people as Cyclone Tauktae moved into India's western coast. AP Photo
  • A man rows a boat on Dal Lake in Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian-administered Kashmir. Rain lashed the city and other parts of Kashmir Valley after a day of sunshine. EPA
    A man rows a boat on Dal Lake in Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian-administered Kashmir. Rain lashed the city and other parts of Kashmir Valley after a day of sunshine. EPA

India's Cyclone Tauktae: Climate change turns Arabian Sea into source of severe storms


Daniel Bardsley
  • English
  • Arabic

Latest: Emirates cancels Mumbai flights after Tauktae cyclone makes landfall

Tropical cyclones will form quicker and become more frequent in the Arabian Sea because of climate change, an expert said as India braces for cyclone Tauktae.

Authorities in north-western India, where heavy rains have fallen, moved tens of thousands of people out of low-lying areas in preparation for Tauktae, which is packing winds of more than 200 kilometres an hour.

The full force of the storm is likely to be felt in the state of Gujarat after at least a dozen people were killed when Tauktae skirted the coast farther south, damaging scores of houses.

The warming has provided that energy for the cyclones to form, which is why we're seeing much more activity in the western coast of India

Its development in the Arabian Sea highlighted an increasing rate of cyclone formation in the area, a trend that could cause more death and destruction in years to come.

Dr Roxy Mathew Koll, a climate scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology in Pune, said the Arabian Sea was experiencing some of the fastest warming of all tropical basins, areas where cyclones form.

"Cyclones draw their energy from the ocean," he told The National.

“The warming has provided that energy for the cyclones to form, which is why we’re seeing much more activity in the western coast of India.

“It’s not just cyclones, but rainfall. Extreme rainfall, of 150 millimetres a day, is increasing in the western coast because of the growing activity and convection in the Arabian Sea.”

Reports suggested that Tauktae, classified as an extremely severe storm by the Indian Meteorological Department, could be the worst tropical cyclone to hit Gujarat in more than 20 years.

Gusts of 210kph from Tauktae have been recorded, forcing roads and the airport in Mumbai, the capital of Maharashtra state, just south of Gujarat, to close.

In Gujarat, about 150,000 people have been moved from coastal areas as a precaution against extreme winds, rainfall and flooding.

The Bay of Bengal, on the eastern side of India, has long been a hotbed of tropical cyclone formation, and one, two or even three typically develop there each year.

But in recent decades the Arabian Sea, which used to be 1°C to 2°C cooler, has warmed up faster and, as a result, pre-monsoon cyclones have formed there for four years in a row.

Dr Koll said there were many reasons relating to circulation of the air  and the oceans to account for faster warming.

The Indian Ocean, of which the Arabian Sea is part, is “much more landlocked” than other basins, which contributes to warming.

"The Indian Ocean is landlocked to the north," Dr Koll said. "That's why the heat doesn't get pushed out.

“These tropical climate projections, they’re showing the Indian Ocean will continue to warm in the Arabian Sea [area] … There’s a study showing extremely severe cyclones will increase in the Arabian Sea.

"We haven’t seen that much of an increase in the Bay of Bengal until now.”

As well as causing more cyclones to form, the warming of oceans is making them intensify faster, Dr Koll said, making it harder for forecasters to give early evacuation warnings.

Now, winds may intensify from between 100kph to 120kph to as fast as 220kph in less than 24 hours.

It is unclear, however, whether the trend means that the Arabian peninsula will suffer more from tropical cyclones, Dr Koll said.

The strongest recorded tropical cyclone to hit the Arabian peninsula was Gonu, which in 2007 caused dozens of deaths and billions of dollars of damage in Oman.

“Although we see more storms and cyclones in the Arabian Sea, we don’t have a clear understanding of the track they’re going to take,” Dr Koll said.

“That’s why we should probably focus on improving these models to see how the track might change in the future. We don’t yet have the data to say that this part of the Arabian Sea is going to [experience] more storms and cyclones.”

People pull a fishing boat ashore before the arrival of Cyclone Tauktae in Veraval, Gujarat, India, on May 17, 2021. Reuters
People pull a fishing boat ashore before the arrival of Cyclone Tauktae in Veraval, Gujarat, India, on May 17, 2021. Reuters