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Hyderabad Braces For 40°C Day With Evening Thunderstorms

Hyderabad will wake up to a searing 40-degree Celsius day on Thursday, but the evening could bring a violent reset. The India Meteorological Department has forecast partly cloudy skies giving way to thundershowers, lightning, and gusty winds reaching 40 kilometres per hour — a classic pre-monsoon pattern that offers temporary relief while exposing the city’s deeper climate vulnerability. Across Telangana, daytime temperatures are expected to range between 41 and 44 degrees Celsius, with similar evening storms.

A meteorological department official confirmed that the maximum temperature in Hyderabad will hover around 40 degrees Celsius, with the minimum settling near 28 degrees. The evening showers, while welcome, are unlikely to cool the city for more than a few hours. Urban heat island effects — amplified by sprawling concrete surfaces, reduced tree cover, and waste heat from vehicles and air conditioners — ensure that night-time temperatures remain elevated longer than in surrounding rural areas. For urban planners, the Hyderabad forecast reads as a case study in compounding risks. Extreme daytime heat drives outdoor workers indoors, reduces productivity, and spikes energy demand. Evening thunderstorms bring flash flooding risks, particularly in low-lying neighbourhoods with inadequate drainage. The same storm that cools the air can paralyse traffic, uproot trees, and expose poor-quality infrastructure. Citizens face whiplash: from heat stress to waterlogging within hours.

The economic implications are measurable. Retail footfall drops during peak afternoon heat. Construction sites lose productive hours. Hospitals see increased cases of dehydration and heat exhaustion. And each thunderstorm tests the city’s stormwater network — much of which was designed for less intense rainfall patterns. A senior urban infrastructure expert noted that cities like Hyderabad are experiencing weather volatility that outpaces infrastructure adaptation. What makes Thursday’s forecast typical is also what makes it troubling. This pattern — hot day, stormy evening — is becoming the new normal for Telangana’s pre-monsoon period. But normalisation risks complacency. The IMD has not issued a heatwave warning for Hyderabad specifically, though some districts may cross the 44-degree mark. For citizens navigating the city’s outer ring roads, metro stations, and unshaded bus stops, the difference between 40 and 44 degrees is academic. The real measure is whether the city’s design — its trees, its water bodies, its building codes — can absorb the shock of both heat and rain in a single day.

Hyderabad Braces For 40°C Day With Evening Thunderstorms