IMD Flags Heatwave Across Six States and Rain Over the Northeast on 19 April 2026
On 19 April 2026 the IMD warned of heatwave conditions over Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and Jharkhand, while forecasting rain and thunderstorms over the Northeast and J&K-Ladakh. The 2026 pre-monsoon outlook expects above-normal heatwave days and warm nights.
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) on 19 April 2026 said heatwave conditions were very likely over Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and Jharkhand. At the same time, Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh and the Northeast — including Arunachal Pradesh, Assam and Meghalaya — were forecast to receive light to moderate rainfall or snow with thunderstorms and gusty winds.
A heatwave, as defined by the IMD over the plains, is declared when the maximum temperature touches at least 40°C and is 4.5°C to 6.4°C above the normal for that location. Over hills the threshold is 30°C, and over coastal areas 37°C. A 'severe' heatwave is declared when the departure from normal exceeds 6.4°C.
The 2026 pre-monsoon season is being closely watched. The IMD's seasonal outlook for April-June 2026 has projected above-normal heatwave days and warmer-than-usual nights across most of central, north and east India. Higher night temperatures are particularly dangerous because the human body relies on cooler nights to recover from daytime heat stress.
Heatwave events have direct economic and social costs — reduced labour productivity in construction and agriculture, higher peak power demand, water stress and excess mortality among the elderly, outdoor workers and slum residents. The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), in coordination with state disaster management authorities, runs Heat Action Plans (HAPs) in over 23 states; Ahmedabad's HAP is the country's oldest and most studied. Key measures include cool roofs, drinking-water kiosks, shifted work hours and early-warning SMS alerts.
Exam angle: Useful recall on the IMD heatwave thresholds (40°C plains, 30°C hills, 37°C coast; +4.5°C departure for heatwave), the role of NDMA and Heat Action Plans, and the climate-change link to warm nights. Strong fit for UPSC GS-1 (geography, climate), GS-3 (disaster management) and SSC/Banking GA.
Key Points to Remember
- Date of forecast: 19 April 2026.
- Heatwave-likely states: Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Jharkhand.
- Rain/snow with thunderstorms over: J&K, Ladakh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya and rest of Northeast.
- IMD heatwave criteria: max 40°C+ over plains, 30°C+ over hills, 37°C+ over coast, with departure of ≥4.5°C from normal.
- Severe heatwave: departure > 6.4°C from normal.
- 2026 pre-monsoon (Apr-Jun) outlook: above-normal heatwave days and warmer-than-usual nights.
- Mitigation: NDMA-led Heat Action Plans (HAPs) in 23+ states; Ahmedabad has India's oldest HAP.
Exam Relevance
Strong fit for UPSC GS-1 (geography, climate change) and GS-3 (disaster management); covers exact IMD definitions and the NDMA-state-HAP framework.
Related Articles
Four Cheetahs from South Africa to be Open for Public Viewing at …
Four cheetahs brought from South Africa under a wildlife exchange programme, which arrived on 18 …
Study: Doubling Air Conditioner Efficiency Could Save India Up to Rs 2.5 …
A new study finds that doubling the energy efficiency of air conditioners over the next …
Draft National Water Metro Policy Proposes Water Transport in 18 Cities
The Draft National Water Metro Policy, 2026 proposes water-based urban transport in 18 Indian cities, …
Bhopal Becomes First Indian City to Deploy Solar-Powered ‘Algae Trees’ to Fight …
Bhopal became the first Indian city to install solar-powered “Algae Trees” — microalgae-based units that …
Delhi Launches 'Metro Monday' Campaign to Promote Fuel Conservation and Public Transport
Delhi launched the 'Metro Monday' campaign on 19 May 2026 to push people toward public …