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Hyderabad weather: City to receive heavy rainfall in the next two days

Hyderabad weather: City to receive heavy rainfall in the next two days

Time of India6 days ago
The weather in
Hyderabad
today is expected to be misty, with temperatures ranging between 23.8 °C and 29.6 °C. With a significant chance of rain at 93%, residents should be prepared for wet conditions. The humidity levels are high, which may make the temperatures feel warmer than they are.
Hyderabad Weather Highlights
Temperature: High - 29.6 °C | Low - 23.8 °C
Weather Condition: Mist
Rain Probability: 93 %
Humidity: 89 %
Wind Speed: 14.8 km/h
Air Quality Index (AQI): 54
Detailed weather forecast for Hyderabad
The morning will be pleasant with temperature at 25.6 degree Celsius, while the temperature will slightly rise in the afternoon to 28.5 degrees Celsius. By evening, it will become cooler and the night will remain pleasant at 24.6 degree.
Rainfall & humidity in Hyderabad
Rain Expected? Yes.
Chance of Rain: 93 %
Humidity Levels: Morning - 77 %, Afternoon - 65 %, Evening - 71 %, Night - 83 %
Hyderabad AQI & wind speed
AQI Level: 54
Major Pollutants: None
Wind Direction & Speed: 14.8 km/h from W
Hyderabad weather forecast for Tomorrow
On July 22, 2025, Hyderabad is expected to experience heavy rain with temperatures ranging from a low of 22.2 °C to a high of 23.0 °C. The rain probability is at 89%, indicating a wet day ahead.
by Taboola
by Taboola
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Weekly weather forecast for Hyderabad
Date
Max Temp (°C)
Min Temp (°C)
Condition
Rain Chance (%)
2025-07-21
29.6
23.8
Moderate rain
93
2025-07-22
23.0
22.2
Heavy rain
89
2025-07-23
23.3
21.9
Patchy rain nearby
88
2025-07-24
23.7
21.6
Patchy rain nearby
89
2025-07-25
23.9
21.9
Patchy rain nearby
87
2025-07-26
24.2
22.0
Patchy rain nearby
84
2025-07-27
28.0
21.9
Patchy rain nearby
83
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Yamuna Bachao Abhiyan convener Shiv Singh Rawat says that scores of dyeing and bleaching units in Panipat functioning without clearances and treatment infrastructure discharge acidic, chlorine-laced waste water into the river. 'The discharge either flows through sewer lines or is dumped via tankers into open land. Ultimately it ends up in the Yamuna through Drain No. 2. The visual discolouration of the water at the point of merger of Drain No. 2 and the Yamuna is a stark indicator of the contamination,' he says. Multiple water sample reports of Drain No. 2 by the HSPCB Laboratory in April this year confirm that several parameters were much higher than the permissible levels fixed by the Central Pollution Control Board. For instance, Biological Oxygen Demand was at 68 mg/l, with the maximum level set at 30 mg/l; Chemical Oxygen Demand was at 284 mg/l, while it should have been no more than 50 mg/l; and Total Dissolved Solids were at 1,858 mg/l, with the cut-off at 500 mg/l. Rishi Kumar, another bleaching unit owner in Didwari, says there could be 400-odd units in Panipat, and only one-fourth were running with permission. 'The recycle market has been sluggish after it reached its peak in 2023. The profit in the bleaching business is around 10-20 paisa per kg of scrap. But running a unit as per the norms increases the cost by ₹1 per kg. So, it is not financially viable,' says Kumar, who runs his unit with due permission from the HSPCB. He says he has 50 tanks on his 5-acre agricultural land, but only half of them are occupied, as the demand is weak. 'I have my own labour force staying inside the unit. We work both ways. We buy cloth scraps from traders, bleach them, and sell them to the spinning mills. The mill owners also send us scraps to bleach,' says Kumar. Following media reports, the National Green Tribunal has taken suo motu cognisance of the illegal bleaching units and issued notices to the HSPCB and Panipat Deputy Commissioner, among others, directing them to file an affidavit a week before the hearing on August 29. HSPCB Regional Officer, Panipat, Bhupinder Singh Chahal says the department has ordered closure of 20 units and sent show-cause notices to a dozen more a month ago. Chahal, however, says the department does not have the figure for the illegal units. Dip in demand Two types of cloth waste are imported: cloth scraps and second-hand clothes. The majority of godowns on Barsat Road, where they are concentrated, deal in scraps. These are bought by spinning mills to be made into yarn. Ramjan, a worker at a warehouse on Barsat Road, says his employer imports 30 tonnes of cloth each season, mostly from Korea and China, both before the onset of summer and winter. 'The scraps are sold for ₹20 a kg. The discarded clothes are sold at ₹100-120 per piece. Mostly traders from Delhi and Assam buy these second-hand clothes and sell them in local markets at high margins,' says Ramjan. Delhi's Sarojini Nagar market is one such hub. Running a firm in the name of A.R. Traders on Barsat Road, Ravinder Garg mostly deals in scraps. 'We sell it to the spinning mill owners through agents. A small percentage of the wastage, not accepted by the spinning mills, ends up as fuel for local industry,' says Garg. He too says the market has been sluggish for the past two years, and his annual sale of scraps has fallen to almost half, at 270 tonnes per year. To boost the industry, Mukesh Gulati, executive director at the Foundation for MSME Clusters, which aims at empowering small and medium enterprises through skilling and sustainable efforts, says India should develop an eco-mark for products with recycled materials. 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