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Dense fog engulfs north India; zero visibility in Punjab’s Bathinda; flight, rail operations hit

Satellite images show a fog layer extending from Punjab and adjoining northwest Rajasthan to Bihar across Haryana, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh

New Delhi:  Biting cold together with dense fog conditions prevailed over the northwest India on Monday morning, a report in The Tribune, Chandigarh, says.

Low visibility prevailed in several parts of the region  especially in Punjab, Haryana and New Delhi.

Punjab’s Bathinda recorded zero visibility on Monday morning. Several places in Haryana and New Delhi, the vvisibility was not beyond 25 metres.

“Due to prevailing fog condition over northwest India and adjoining east India, necessary action is required to be taken by the concerned stake holders,” said IMD officials

This was the fifth conseccutive day of bitter  cold wave conditions fin  New Delhi  on Monday,  January  9, even as very dense fog lowered visibility to just 25 metres, hitting road, rail and air traffic movement, officials said.

The visibility levels dropped to 25 metres at the Palam observatory, near the IGI Airport, and the Safdarjung observatory, Delhi’s primary weather station, an official of the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said.

Around 29 trains have been delayed by two to five hours due to the  heavy fog, a railway official said. Also  around 15 flights were delayed and one flight was diverted due to bad weather, officials at the Indira Gandhi International Airport said.

Satellite images showed a fog layer extending from Punjab and adjoining northwest Rajasthan to Bihar across Haryana, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh.

Cold wave conditions persisted in the capital for the fifth day though minimum temperatures rose marginally.

The Safdarjung observatory logged a minimum temperature of 3.8 degrees Celsius as against 1.9 degrees on Sunday.

The weather stations at Lodhi Road, Ayanagar and Ridge recorded a minimum temperature of 3.6 degrees, 3.2 degrees and 3.3 degrees.

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