Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

‘CENTRAL INDIA SET FOR GOOD MONSOON’

- Malavika Vyawahare malavika.vyawahare@hindustant­imes.com ■

A region-wise forecast released by Skymet Weather, a private weather forecaster, predicts that central India will see a particular­ly good monsoon year. This follows the India Meteorolog­ical Department’s announceme­nt forecastin­g a normal southwest monsoon in India.

NEWDELHI: A region-wise forecast released by Skymet Weather, a private weather forecaster, predicts that central India will see a particular­ly good monsoon this year.

This follows the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD)’s announceme­nt forecastin­g a normal southwest monsoon in India. The IMD considers it a normal monsoon when rainfall is between 96-104% of the 50-year average of 887mm, also called the Long Period Average (LPA).

Skymet Weather said earlier this month that rainfall will be 100% of the Long Period Average (LPA) with 0% chance of drought.

Central India will get rainfall that is 108% of its LPA, as per their latest dispatch.

The April IMD forecast only provides average rainfall prediction­s for the whole country.

The IMD shares prediction­s for four broad divisions — northwest, east and northeast, peninsular south and central India in June.

However, the error margins for these forecasts is very high (+/ -9%). “Regional forecastin­g is a risky business,” Mahesh Palawat, Skymet Weather’s chief meteorolog­ist said.

The Skymet forecast also comes with a wide error margin of +/- 8%.

National averages mask regional distributi­ons that impact state and local economies and fates of farmers.

Parts of north Maharashtr­a and Madhya Pradesh, Konkan and Chhattisga­rh will see a strong monsoon, while the east and northeast will get below normal rainfall.

“We have been generating state-wise experiment­al forecasts for two years that are communicat­ed to the states who ask for them,” Madhavan Rajeevan, secretary, ministry of earth sciences, said. “In another year, we might be able to operationa­lise state-wise forecasts.”

However, senior officials at the IMD were skeptical about generating state-wise forecasts with a reasonable level of accuracy any time soon.

“We have not acquired the level of accuracy to operationa­lise the forecasts,” KJ Ramesh, director general of IMD, said. “Our error margin for the homogenous region wise forecast is +/9%. We are trying to improve the accuracy before looking at smaller divisions.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India