CM Fadnavis Reviews Monsoon Crisis, Issues Red Alert Directives
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Maharashtra announced on Monday, 6 July 2026 that Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis visited the disaster management control room at Mantralaya, Mumbai, to personally review the state's deteriorating monsoon situation and issue a comprehensive set of emergency directives to district and state officials.
Context
The review meeting, held amid an escalating weather emergency, was attended by Minister Girish Mahajan, the state's Chief Secretary, the Director General of Police, and the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) Commissioner. Divisional commissioners and district collectors across affected regions joined via video conference. The session produced a detailed set of instructions covering evacuation, traffic management, and public safety.
The post stated, 'पुढचे 2 दिवस सतर्क रहा' ('Stay alert for the next two days'), with the situation expected to improve from 8 July onwards.
Policy Backdrop
Maharashtra's disaster response framework operates under the Disaster Management Act, 2005, which mandates the Maharashtra State Disaster Management Authority (MSDMA) to coordinate multi-agency monsoon response. Direct oversight by the Chief Minister during extreme weather has become standard practice within this integrated framework, with daily control-room reviews and pre-positioned NDRF and SDRF teams being routine during orange and red alerts.
The state's Konkan coast, Western Ghats, and the Mumbai Metropolitan Region are recurrently affected between June and September each year, requiring district-level preparedness protocols to be activated swiftly. This year's monsoon has been particularly intense, with Mumbai recording 90% of its total July rainfall within just four days, causing 310 trees to fall across the city.
Stakeholders and Impact
Rivers in Raigad, Palghar, and Ratnagiri districts have crossed danger levels. Palghar and the Konkan region are under red alert, with evacuation of 500 citizens in Palghar already under way. In Nashik Rural, extremely heavy rainfall — with the possibility of a cloudbursts reaching 350 mm — is forecast for the early hours of 7 July, prompting evacuation orders and police alerts.
The Alandi Palkhi procession, scheduled to begin on 7 July, faces disruption as all four bridges over the Indrayani river at Alandi are submerged due to flooding. CM Fadnavis has directed the Pune District Collector to take special care of Warkari pilgrims and has instructed them to proceed directly to Pune without entering Alandi. The Mumbai–Ahmedabad National Highway has also been affected by debris, and the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) has been directed to clear it and restore traffic flow.
In Satara ghat areas, heavy rainfall has led to the displacement of residents from two locations. Mumbai is bracing for a high tide from 3:00 PM combined with stronger winds than the previous day. Construction associations at active building sites have been placed on alert for potential landslides.
What's Next
Between 6 and 7 July, moderate to heavy rainfall is forecast in the ghat areas of central Maharashtra, raising the possibility of discharge from several dams in the region. Residents along riverbanks in central Maharashtra, Mumbai-MMR, and Konkan have been specifically asked to follow local administration guidelines strictly.
NDRF and SDRF teams are deployed and on standby across affected districts. Disaster management control rooms at every district, taluka, and village level have been activated. Citizens have been urged to avoid sea beaches during high tide, exercise extreme caution on ghat roads and near flooded rivers, and contact emergency control rooms immediately in case of crisis. The administration expects conditions to begin improving from 8 July 2026.