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Delhi: Yamuna water level recedes below danger mark

July 31, 2021 11:30 am | Updated November 22, 2021 09:57 pm IST - New Delhi

The water discharged from the barrage normally takes two to three days to reach the capital.

A man rows a makeshift raft with a lady and her belongings as the hutments along the Yamuna under the old Yamuna bridge (loha pul) have submerged due to rising flood waters in the river Yamuna which is now flowing above the danger mark, in New Delhi on Friday.

The water level in the Yamuna receded below the danger mark of 205.33 on Saturday morning, a day after the Delhi administration sounded a flood alert and expedited efforts to evacuate people living in the river floodplains.

The water level was recorded at 205.01 metres at the Old Railway Bridge at 8 a.m. It was 205.44 metres at 1 am and 205.20 metres at 6 a.m., an official said.

On Friday, with Haryana discharging more water into the river from the Hathnikund Barrage, the Delhi Police and the East Delhi district administration started evacuating people living on the floodplains of the Yamuna in the capital.

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The Irrigation and Flood Control Department deployed 13 boats in different areas and put 21 others on standby.

 

A flood alert is declared when the Yamuna crosses the "warning mark" of 204.50 metres. The situation is being monitored round-the-clock, a district administration official said.

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According to the Delhi flood control room, the discharge rate at the Hathnikund Barrage peaked to 1.60 lakh cusecs on Tuesday afternoon, the highest this year so far.

The water discharged from the barrage normally takes two to three days to reach the capital.

Haryana had been releasing water from the Yumananagar-located barrage at the rate of 37,109 cusecs at 8 p.m. on Friday, it increased to 45,180 at 1 a.m. on Saturday, which resulted in the water level reaching 205.44.

At 6 a.m. on Saturday, the water was released at the rate of 35,109 cusecs.

Normally, the flow rate at the Hathnikund barrage is 352 cusec, but the discharge is increased after heavy rainfall in catchment areas.

One cusec is equivalent to 28.32 litres per second.

In 2019, the flow rate had peaked to 8.28 lakh cusecs on August 18-19, and the water level of the Yamuna had hit the 206.60 metre-mark, breaching the danger mark of 205.33 metres.

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