Met office and WAPDA separately described Pakistan Weather and River flows and reservoir levels as following.
Rivers: Indus at Tarbela: Inflows 144500 cusecs and Outflows 146000 cusecs.
Kabul at Nowshera: Inflows 52600 cusecs and Outflows 52600 cusecs.
Khairabad Bridge: Inflows 202200 cusecs and Outflows 202200.
Jhelum at Mangla: Inflows 33200 cusecs and Outflows 37000 cusecs.
Chenab at Marala: Inflows 28400 cusecs and Outflows 7600 cusecs
Barrages: Jinnah: Inflows 218300 cusecs and Outflows 210900 cusecs.
Chashma: Inflows: 210000 cusecs and Outflows 203000 cusecs.
Taunsa: Inflows 186500 cusecs and Outflows 161700 cusecs.
Guddu: Inflows 151800 cusecs and Outflows 115600 cusecs.
Sukkur: Inflows 100300 cusecs and Outflows 57100 cusecs.
Kotri: Inflows 11800 cusecs and Outflows Nil cusecs.
Trimmu: Inflows 16600 cusecs and Outflows 2300 cusecs.
Panjnad: Inflows 13100 cusecs and Outflows Nil cusecs.
Reservoirs (Level and Storage): Tarbela: Minimum operating level 1402 feet, present level 1444.90 feet, maximum conservation level 1550 feet, live storage today 0.863 MAF.
Mangla: Minimum operating level 1050 feet, present level 1171.90 feet, maximum conservation level 1242 feet, live storage today 2.670 MAF.
Chashma: Minimum operating level 638.15 feet, present level 643.40 feet, maximum conservation level 649 feet, live storage today 0.096 MAF
The inflows and outflows of River Indus at Tarbela, Jinnah and Chashma, River Kabul at Nowshera and River Jhelum at Mangla have been reflected as mean flows of 24 hours, whereas the other flows have been gauged at 6.00 a.m.
Today’s Weather:
Pakistan is witnessing highly contrasting weather conditions as regional patterns shifting from severe storm aftermaths to intense summer humidity.
Lahorites woke up to a pleasant temperature drop after a dust storm and rainfall swept through the provincial metropolis.
Met office says Lahore’s temperatures may drop at comfortable 33°C under partly cloudy skies. At night, it might further drops to 21°C.
Karachi remains gripped by muggy, oppressive heat. The port city is facing a high of 33°C, made more intense by high humidity levels. While southwest winds of 17 mph are providing slight relief, weather trackers note a lingering chance of brief, passing showers later in the day.
Islamabad is bracing for unstable weather. Met office predicts a high of 32°C and a low of 24°C, with partly sunny skies expected to give way to scattered afternoon showers and heavy thunderstorms.
The Pakistan Meteorological Department has advised citizens in northern and central regions to stay updated on sudden thunderstorm developments. However, coastal residents should prepare for continued high humidity.


