Business Standard

Aug rains at 19-yr low; Delhi sees best season in 11 yrs

- AGENCIES New Delhi, 10 September

Monsoon 2021 has been a season of extremes. Latest informatio­n from the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) showed that rainfall in August, which saw 24 per cent deficiency, was the lowest in 19 years.

However,indelhi,the monsoon,thoughdela­yed,was amongthehi­ghestinthe­last11 yearsat1,005.3mm,sofar.

This is the first time since 2010 that rainfall in Delhi breached the 1,000-mm mark during the monsoon season.

Meanwhile, the IMD said in August that two major spells of weak monsoon prevailed over the country — from August 9-16 and August 23-27. During this time, northwest, central and adjoining peninsular and west coast of India had subdued rainfall activity.

“During August 2021, rainfall over the country, as a whole, was below the long period average (LPA) by minus 24 per cent. It is also the lowest August rainfall in the last 19 years, since 2002,” the IMD said.

The southwest monsoon season officially commences from June 1 and lasts till September 30. June recorded 10 per cent more rainfall, but both July and August clocked a deficiency of 7 and 24 per cent, respective­ly, according to IMD data.

Of the four meteorolog­ical divisions of the IMD, the central India division received 39 per cent less rain. The division consists of large swathes of areas from Maharashtr­a, Gujarat, Goa, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh and Odisha.

Deficiency in the northwest India division, which comprises northern Indian states, was 30 per cent.

The deficiency was 10 per cent in the south peninsula, whereas the east and northeast division received two per cent more rainfall than normal.

The IMD had predicted that rainfall activity was expected to be normal during August. It has now predicted above normal precipitat­ion in September.

In Delhi, on the other hand, intense bursts of rain pounded the capital in July and September, sometimes 100 mm precipitat­ion in a few hours. This submerged roads, residentia­l areas, schools, hospitals, and markets in knee-deep water and plunged vehicular traffic into chaos.

Delhi recorded more than 100 mm of rain on two consecutiv­e days at the start of the month — 112.1 mm on September 1 and 117.7 mm on September 2. It has so far received 248.9 mm precipitat­ion this month, surpassing the September average of 129.8 mm by a huge margin.

Despite the monsoon embracing Delhi only on July 13, making it the mostdelaye­d in 19 years, the capital had recorded 16 rainy days in the month, the maximum in the last four years.

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