The storm, reduced to a depression by Monday noon, has further weakened and is lying over southwest Bihar and its neighbourhood as a "well-marked low pressure area" with a speed of 25-35kmph, MeT department said.
Marking of the low pressure area means MeT department is now treating it as a normal phenomenon and no longer as a cyclone.
The weatherman, however, warned that despite its severely reduced intensity, the low pressure area still carries clouds which will lead to heavy rainfall in Bihar and the sub- Himalayan regions of Nepal, West Bengal and Sikkim in the coming 24-48 hours.
The storm, first observed as a low pressure area on Oct. 3 in the North Andaman Sea, gradually turned into a "very severe cyclonic storm" and made landfall on Oct. 12 between Kalingapatnam and Paradip with its epicentre being Gopalpur in Odisha.
The intense storm, coupled with extremely heavy rainfall which lasted for six hours after landfall, battered the east coast on Saturday evening. But by noon on Sunday, the storm had reduced in intensity with its speed coming down to 160-170kmph.
According to Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, the cyclonic storm has led to losses of more than Rs 3,000 crore with over 2.4 lakh houses destroyed in Odisha alone.
