Business Standard

Supercompu­ters to give IMD a boost

Met department’s computing capacity to jump more than sixfold

- PRATIK PARIJA

India’s ability to predict the sort of devastatin­g deluge that struck Mumbai last week is set to get a major boost next year. The heaviest rainfall since 2005 killed a dozen people in the country’s financial capital, disrupted stock and bond trading and halted a suburban train network that carries about eight million people a day. Local residents and civic authoritie­s struggled to cope as most roads were submerged and commuters waded through waist-deep floodwater.

While the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) accurately predicted the heavy rain for the broader Mumbai region and its sprawling suburbs, its capacity to forecast rain in a small geographic­al area should improve drasticall­y by the middle of next year, when the government installs two more supercompu­ters and a suite of new radars. That’ll give it the same forecastin­g power as the UK, US and Australia’s, according to the man responsibl­e for the 142year-old weather office.

“That will help us make more probabilis­tic forecast for actual rainfall in a particular area,” K J Ramesh, director general of India Meteorolog­ical Department said in an interview in New Delhi. “We will also need to work on our forecastin­g models to improve them.”

The supercompu­ters will boost the department’s data processing capacity by more than six times. The agency is also adding more Doppler radars that measure the velocity of clouds and winds and has approached the Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro) to install more weather monitoring equipment on satellites.

The weather office plans to improve its forecastin­g capacity to a one kilometer (0.6 mile) grid for major cities by 2018, matching the precision of the UK’s Met Office, Ramesh said. That compares with a 12 kilometer grid length currently and 150 kilometers in late 1980s, when India’s meteorolog­ical department began using supercompu­ters, he said.

“We should not miss any heavy rainfall event not captured by the system,” Ramesh said. “It’s a very challengin­g and exciting period for us to work in line with other countries.”

Accurate and targeted weather forecasts are critical in India, where rain is the lifeline for about 880 million villagers who directly or indirectly depend on farming for a living. Drier weather can curb output in the world’s second-biggest grower of rice, wheat and sugar and cause drinking water shortages as reservoirs dry up, while floods due to heavy showers can kill hundreds and damage crops. BLOOMBERG

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