As temperatures soar, the wait for south-west monsoon could be a bit longer with the weatherman saying the annual rains would arrive in Kerala only next week.
“There is no further progress as yet,” India Meteorological Department’s chief forecaster D. Sivananda Pai told PTI when asked about the progress of monsoon.
Weather scientists said conditions were becoming favourable for further advance of monsoon over some parts of the Bay of Bengal during the next three days.
However, scientists do not see this as an indication towards an early onset over Kerala.
“We stick to the IMD’s forecast of monsoon onset over Kerala by June 3,” Swati Basu, director of National Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting, told PTI.
The monsoon rains, crucial for India’s agro-based economy, brought first showers to the Andaman Sea on May 17, three days earlier than the usual date, aided by the then raging cyclone Mahasen.
It made some headway between May 17 and May 20 but has not moved any further since.
Cyclone Mahasen, which ravaged coastal Bangladesh and parts of Myanmar, sucked up moisture in the monsoon winds, leaving them dry.
“Cyclonic activity weakens monsoon flow. It takes some time to reorganise,” Pai said when asked about the reasons for the delay in onset over Kerala.
Mercury levels have been rising across north India for the past week with temperatures crossing 45 degree Celsius in parts of Rajasthan, Haryana and Punjab yesterday.
Monsoon watchers expect a strong phase of rainfall in the first week of June after the onset over Kerala, an activity attributed to the wet phase of the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) wave that passes over the Indian Ocean during the period.
The MJO is a fluctuation of atmospheric pressure over the equatorial Indian Ocean and western Pacific Ocean that comes in the form of alternating cyclonic (wet) and anti-cyclonic (dry) regions that enhance and suppress rainfall respectively.
Last month, the weather office had forecast normal monsoon this year with overall rainfall expected to be 98 per cent of the long period average.
Monsoon is crucial for kharif crops like rice, soyabean, cotton and maize as almost 60 per cent of the farm land in the country is rain-fed.
While IMD’s short-term weather forecasts have been by and large accurate, it is the monsoon predictions which have received flak from several quarters.
The most recent example of the shortcoming of the IMD was last year’s forecast, when it predicted 99 per cent rains of the long period average, while the actual figures stood at 92 per cent with Gujarat, Maharashtra and Karnataka facing drought conditions.
The IMD had also predicted normal monsoon season in 2009, which ended with 22 per cent deficient rains — the worst in at least four decades.
Scientists attribute this to the deficiencies in the monsoon forecast model which was unable to capture the regional variations in rainfall.
Basu said the Ministry of Earth Sciences has embarked on augmenting observation facilities and high power computing capabilities of the IMD with stress on satellite—based observations.