The deep depression is now 200 kilometers southeast of the port city and is slowly making its way from India’s Rann of Kutch towards the Arabian Sea, according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) on Friday.
The PMD predicts that this deep depression, a powerful region of low pressure, will continue to move west-southwest along Sindh’s coastal strip.
If the weather holds out, the low pressure system may strengthen even more into a cyclonic storm by this afternoon or tonight when it enters the Arabian Sea, according to the PMD’s most recent cyclone notice.
Furthermore, the Met Office warned that high gusts and thundershowers might accompany the potential for heavy rain in Karachi over the course of the next 24 hours.
According to the meteorological department’s estimate for Friday, the city’s minimum temperature would be 26°C, and its highest temperature would probably be between 28 and 30°C.
In the meanwhile, 22 km/h winds are coming from the northeast in the city.
The Met Office predicts that Sindh regions might see significant rainfall as a result of the possible cyclonic storm.
Along with sporadic breaks, a significant rainstorm is also anticipated in the districts of Hub, Lasbella, Awaran, Keach, and Gwadar between August 30 and September 1.
While sea conditions are predicted to continue challenging with squally gusts, heavy rains may produce water logging or rain flooding in low lying sections of the Sindh-Makran coast.