New Delhi: As monsoon makes rapid progress, weather
scientists today said the annual rains would cover the entire country
ahead of schedule but were skeptical about showers in September.
“Monsoon has been very good so far having covered two-thirds of the
country’s land-mass,” Laxman Singh Rathore, Director-General of India
Meteorological Department, told reporters in New Delhi.
Releasing an update on the monsoon forecast, he said the country
would receive normal and fairly distributed rain in July and August.
Rainfall is expected to be at 101 per cent of the long-term average in
July and 96 percent in August.
For the country as a whole, monsoon has been 28 percent excess since onset over Kerala on 1 June.
Rathore, who has vast experience in agro-meteorology, said that early
onset of monsoon has led to early sowing, particularly of coarse
cereals in last year’s drought-hit regions.
“Whenever there is timely sowing, we have seen that the production is
good. Particularly with respect to drought-hit regions of 2012– the
semi-arid corridor which produces coarse cereals there has been early
sowing,” he said.
Also, the bright side for paddy crop is that with timely onset of
monsoon nursery raising is in place. “This would facilitate early or
timely cross planting,” he said.
Rathore said for long-term crops like cotton, sugarcane and
plantation crops the irrigation requirement has vanished due to good
rains, which would lead to lower cultivation costs and healthy crop.
The weatherman said rainfall has been good in drought-hit with
Marathwada getting 32 per cent excess rains, Vidarbha (96), Madhya
Maharashtra (82), north interior Karnataka (53), south interior
Karnataka (41) and Saurashtra and Kutch 200 percent excess rains.
Rathore said 90 percent of the 36 meteorological sub-divisions have
received normal of excess rainfall since the onset of monsoon.
Monsoon rains have been scanty in the three sub-divisions of the
northeast, he said but added that the region had received a good spell
of pre-monsoon rains.
Haryana has so far received relatively lesser rains than its
surrounding areas and the situation there was expected to improve in the
coming week.
Rathore said the country would get excess and fairly well distributed rainfall in June.
The IMD also stuck to its April forecast of normal monsoon this year.
This is the fourth straight year that the government has forecast normal monsoon.
Regionwise, southern peninsula was expected to top the table with a
rainfall of 103 percent for the season as a whole, followed by central
and northeast India with a rainfall of 98 percent each and northwest 94
percent.
Rathore said that though compared to south India, the northwestern
region was likely to get lesser rains, in absolute terms, rainfall over
the northwest region will certainly not be insignificant.
“Ninety-four percent rainfall falls well within the normal range. There is no need for any worry,” he said.
Weather scientists are skeptical about the monsoon maintaining its
momentum in the second half of the season, particularly September, as
they see some unfavourable conditions developing in the Indian Ocean.
Monsoon is crucial for the kharif crops such as rice, soyabean,
cotton and maize because almost 60 per cent of the farm land in the
country is rainfed.
Rathore said El Nino or the seasonal warming of the equatorial
Pacific Ocean which is known influence monsoon would continue to be
neutral.
Source: http://www.firstpost.com/india/excess-monsoon-so-far-july-aug-to-get-normal-rains-872547.html