Re: [datameet] Need temperature data | Activists name and shame heat wave suspects

2014-05-12 Thread Sabarish, KSITM
There is a website called http://www.fallingrain.com/world/index.html

and Karnataka

http://www.fallingrain.com/world/IN/19/
http://www.fallingrain.com/world/IN/19/

for Karnataka, which gives the temp and percipitation details, chk, wether
they have historical  data
Reg
SABA



On Sat, May 10, 2014 at 5:25 PM, Rajesh Shah sha...@gmail.com wrote:


 Hi,

 The article below screams out for a data visual!

 It would be great to see trends of daily highs/lows over the past couple
 of decades in B'lore. Number of days over 35, ...

 Also, as far as i know, Bangalore measures temperature in a cool place in
 IISc rather than a spot on MG Road (which is what people experience). Is
 that true?

 Can someone please help with getting Bangalore temperature data history?
 I have tried searching and the IMD website but found some averages
 (monthly), but not enough detail.

 Thanks in advance,
 Rajesh

 



 http://www.bangaloremirror.com/bangalore/others/Activists-name-and-shame-heat-wave-suspects/articleshow/34543065.cms





Activists name and shame heat wave suspects
  Bangalore Mirror Bureau | May 3, 2014, 02.00 AM IST
  [image: Activists name and shame heat wave suspects]















  Soaring temperature has triggered extensive debate among Bangaloreans in
 the past few months. Despite the claim by weathermen that the mercury
 levels are well within the summer normal range, people are experiencing
 intense heat across the city. Even as many wonder what could have made
 Bangalore — a city known for its salubrious climate — resemble a boiling
 cauldron, environmentalists point fingers at five major culprits.* Nidhi
 Yalburgi* take a closer look


 *1. WHOPPING REDUCTION **IN TREE COVER*

 As per estimates by scientists at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc),
 loss of green cover has opened up the city to direct sunlight. Experts are
 of the view that in each of the 198 wards of BBMP, there should have been a
 minimum of 20 per cent green cover. But currently, it ranges between 2-10
 per cent, adding to the rise in temperature. A decade ago, the city had 111
 villages within its limits, with lots of lung space dotted with large
 trees, and natural depressions filled with water. But rapid urbanisation
 has converted all these into a concrete jungle.

 *2. Disappearance of tanks/lakes*

 Bangalore was once known to have around 940 lakes, but has around 200
 lakes on paper today, though many of them are nothing more than sewage
 pools. Also, around 50-60 per cent of the city's economic activity was
 earlier centred around agriculture and horticulture. Experts believe that
 these water bodies, to a certain extent, controlled temperature levels by
 adding moisture into the atmosphere. Today, many of them are just filled
 with sewage and absorb more and more heat, releasing greenhouse gases.

 *3. Glass towers which create heat islands*

 Innumerable glass-fronted buildings across Bangalore are also contributing
 to the high temperature during summer. Such buildings are a good fit in the
 city landscapes of countries in the cold West. But when copied to an Indian
 urban setting, they contribute majorly to the soaring temperature. A study
 by green activists has revealed that these glass buildings radiate heat,
 creating heat islands across the city, which then converge to raise surface
 temperature by 2 to 3 degrees Celsius more than the average.

 *4. Metallic toys burn more than rubber*

 As automobile and vehicle tyres burn rubber, there's collateral damage to
 the environment too. As per the study, vehicles, along with buildings,
 contribute to a 12 per cent increase in the heat level per day. Heat from
 vehicle combustion, as well as the mixing of sun rays with vehicle
 emissions, adds to surface temperature. With hardly any green cover to
 absorb this radiation, the heat gets trapped in the atmosphere and is
 circulated uniformly along the surface.

 *5. Lack of open spaces and waste-burning *

 Experts are of the view that open spaces within cities would moderate the
 climate. Bangalore has already lost several of its lung spaces either to
 land sharks or illegal settlements. About 40,000 hectares of area around
 Bangalore is under construction, though a third of it should have been set
 aside to provide green cover. Additionally, about 10-15 per cent of
 municipal waste is being burnt everyday, releasing dangerous hydrocarbons
 into the environment.



 The actual victims of this mindless urbanisation are the old citizens of
 Bangalore as they are unable to cope up with climatic changes. Large-scale
 radiation by buildings in the absence of trees has increased the levels of
 ground level or bad ozone, and hundreds of reports in this regard have been
 quietly sidelined. What we need is political will to tackle these
 activities.
 *A N Yallappa Reddy, IFS (Rtd), ecologist *

 Urban planners need to focus more on increasing green cover at the ward
 level. Green cover at every ward is 

Re: [datameet] Need temperature data | Activists name and shame heat wave suspects

2014-05-12 Thread Pavan Srinath
Hi Rajesh,

You can check out what I wrote on this last year:
blog.knowyourclimate.org/2013/changing-local-climate-of-bangalore-1/

 a paper by TV Ramachandra at IISc:
http://wgbis.ces.iisc.ernet.in/energy/paper/Bangalore_heatisland/index.htm

Regards,
Pavan


On Sat, May 10, 2014 at 5:25 PM, Rajesh Shah sha...@gmail.com wrote:


 Hi,

 The article below screams out for a data visual!

 It would be great to see trends of daily highs/lows over the past couple
 of decades in B'lore. Number of days over 35, ...

 Also, as far as i know, Bangalore measures temperature in a cool place in
 IISc rather than a spot on MG Road (which is what people experience). Is
 that true?

 Can someone please help with getting Bangalore temperature data history?
 I have tried searching and the IMD website but found some averages
 (monthly), but not enough detail.

 Thanks in advance,
 Rajesh

 



 http://www.bangaloremirror.com/bangalore/others/Activists-name-and-shame-heat-wave-suspects/articleshow/34543065.cms





Activists name and shame heat wave suspects
  Bangalore Mirror Bureau | May 3, 2014, 02.00 AM IST
  [image: Activists name and shame heat wave suspects]















  Soaring temperature has triggered extensive debate among Bangaloreans in
 the past few months. Despite the claim by weathermen that the mercury
 levels are well within the summer normal range, people are experiencing
 intense heat across the city. Even as many wonder what could have made
 Bangalore — a city known for its salubrious climate — resemble a boiling
 cauldron, environmentalists point fingers at five major culprits.* Nidhi
 Yalburgi* take a closer look


 *1. WHOPPING REDUCTION **IN TREE COVER*

 As per estimates by scientists at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc),
 loss of green cover has opened up the city to direct sunlight. Experts are
 of the view that in each of the 198 wards of BBMP, there should have been a
 minimum of 20 per cent green cover. But currently, it ranges between 2-10
 per cent, adding to the rise in temperature. A decade ago, the city had 111
 villages within its limits, with lots of lung space dotted with large
 trees, and natural depressions filled with water. But rapid urbanisation
 has converted all these into a concrete jungle.

 *2. Disappearance of tanks/lakes*

 Bangalore was once known to have around 940 lakes, but has around 200
 lakes on paper today, though many of them are nothing more than sewage
 pools. Also, around 50-60 per cent of the city's economic activity was
 earlier centred around agriculture and horticulture. Experts believe that
 these water bodies, to a certain extent, controlled temperature levels by
 adding moisture into the atmosphere. Today, many of them are just filled
 with sewage and absorb more and more heat, releasing greenhouse gases.

 *3. Glass towers which create heat islands*

 Innumerable glass-fronted buildings across Bangalore are also contributing
 to the high temperature during summer. Such buildings are a good fit in the
 city landscapes of countries in the cold West. But when copied to an Indian
 urban setting, they contribute majorly to the soaring temperature. A study
 by green activists has revealed that these glass buildings radiate heat,
 creating heat islands across the city, which then converge to raise surface
 temperature by 2 to 3 degrees Celsius more than the average.

 *4. Metallic toys burn more than rubber*

 As automobile and vehicle tyres burn rubber, there's collateral damage to
 the environment too. As per the study, vehicles, along with buildings,
 contribute to a 12 per cent increase in the heat level per day. Heat from
 vehicle combustion, as well as the mixing of sun rays with vehicle
 emissions, adds to surface temperature. With hardly any green cover to
 absorb this radiation, the heat gets trapped in the atmosphere and is
 circulated uniformly along the surface.

 *5. Lack of open spaces and waste-burning *

 Experts are of the view that open spaces within cities would moderate the
 climate. Bangalore has already lost several of its lung spaces either to
 land sharks or illegal settlements. About 40,000 hectares of area around
 Bangalore is under construction, though a third of it should have been set
 aside to provide green cover. Additionally, about 10-15 per cent of
 municipal waste is being burnt everyday, releasing dangerous hydrocarbons
 into the environment.



 The actual victims of this mindless urbanisation are the old citizens of
 Bangalore as they are unable to cope up with climatic changes. Large-scale
 radiation by buildings in the absence of trees has increased the levels of
 ground level or bad ozone, and hundreds of reports in this regard have been
 quietly sidelined. What we need is political will to tackle these
 activities.
 *A N Yallappa Reddy, IFS (Rtd), ecologist *

 Urban planners need to focus more on increasing green cover at the ward
 level. Green cover at every ward is important as it would 

[datameet] Need temperature data | Activists name and shame heat wave suspects

2014-05-10 Thread Rajesh Shah

  
  

Hi,
  
  The article below screams out for a data visual!
  
  It would be great to see trends of daily highs/lows over the past
  couple of decades in B'lore. Number of days over 35, ...
  
  Also, as far as i know, Bangalore measures temperature in a cool
  place in IISc rather than a spot on MG Road (which is what people
  experience). Is that true?
  
  Can someone please help with getting Bangalore temperature data
  history?
  I have tried searching and the IMD website but found some averages
  (monthly), but not enough detail.
  
  Thanks in advance,
  Rajesh
  
  
  
  
  
  
  http://www.bangaloremirror.com/bangalore/others/Activists-name-and-shame-heat-wave-suspects/articleshow/34543065.cms
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

  
  
Activists name and shame heat wave
  suspects

  
Bangalore
  Mirror Bureau | May 3, 2014, 02.00 AM IST



  

  
  


  
  

  

  

  

  

  



  
  






























Soaring
  temperature has triggered extensive debate among
  Bangaloreans in the past few months. Despite the
  claim by weathermen that the mercury levels are
  well within the summer normal range, people are
  experiencing intense heat across the city. Even as
  many wonder what could have made Bangalore — a
  city known for its salubrious climate — resemble a
  boiling cauldron, environmentalists point fingers
  at five major culprits. Nidhi
  Yalburgi take a closer look
  
  
  1.
WHOPPING REDUCTION IN TREE COVER
  
  As per estimates by scientists at the Indian
  Institute of Science (IISc), loss of green cover
  has opened up the city to direct sunlight. Experts
  are of the view that in each of the 198 wards of
  BBMP, there should have been a minimum of 20 per
  cent green cover. But currently, it ranges between
  2-10 per cent, adding to the rise in temperature.
  A decade ago, the city had 111 villages within its
  limits, with lots of lung space dotted with large
  trees, and natural depressions filled with water.
  But rapid urbanisation has converted all these
  into a concrete jungle.
  
  2.
Disappearance of tanks/lakes
  
  Bangalore was once known to have around 940 lakes,
  but has around 200 lakes on paper today, though
  many of them are nothing more than sewage pools.
  Also, around 50-60 per cent of the city's economic
  activity was earlier centred around agriculture
  and horticulture. Experts believe that these water
  bodies, to a certain extent, controlled
  temperature levels by adding moisture into the
  atmosphere. Today, many of them are just filled
  with sewage and absorb more and more heat,
  releasing greenhouse gases.
  
  3. Glass
towers which create heat islands
  
  Innumerable glass-fronted buildings across
  Bangalore