Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (Jul 2015)

Brief Communication: Climatic, meteorological and topographical causes of the 16–17 June 2013 Kedarnath (India) natural disaster event

  • R. Singh,
  • D. Siingh,
  • S. A. Gokani,
  • M. G. Sreeush,
  • P. S. Buchunde,
  • A. K. Maurya,
  • R. P. Singh,
  • A. K. Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-15-1597-2015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 7
pp. 1597 – 1601

Abstract

Read online

The devastating flood episode (16–17 June 2013) at Kedarnath (Uttrakhand, India), caused a huge loss of lives and loss of physical/material wealth. To understand this catastrophic event, rainfall/convective data and associated climate meteorological parameters are investigated. A low-pressure zone with very high cloud cover (60–90 %) and relative humidity (70–100 %), associated with low (−1) wind velocity, are observed over the Kedarnath region during 15–17 June. The cause of this disaster seems to be heavy and continuous rainfall, associated with snowmelt and the overflooding/collapse of Chorabari Lake, located upstream. Monsoon advancement was much faster than usual, due to the presence of the convectively active phase of the Madden–Julian oscillation.