Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Heaviest monsoon rain in 25 years, says IMD

DELAYED WITHDRAWAL Monsoon may retreat by Oct 10, longest delay in recorded history

- Jayashree Nandi

NEWDELHI:THE India Meteorolog­ical Department announced the end of the 2019 southwest monsoon season on Monday and said that the country had received the heaviest showers in 25 years with 110% of the long-period-average (LPA) rainfall.

But the withdrawal of the monsoon is likely to begin only around October 10 — the longest delay since data first started being recorded. The last record for the longest delay of the summer monsoon was in 1961: October 1. The monsoon usually starts withdrawin­g in the first week of September from northern India.

The onset of the summer monsoon was late this year: June 8, and rainfall by deficient by 33% at the end of the month. But July, August and September received 105%, 115% and 152% of their LPA, respective­ly.

IMD had predicted a near normal monsoon at 96% of LPA in May but had not forecast the prolonged season.

“IMD had predicted the monsoon performanc­e would be better in the second half compared to the first half. IMD’S analysis on weakening of El Nino and developmen­t of a positive Indian Ocean Dipole and second half monsoon rainfall being above normal were thus proved correct. However, quantitati­vely, realised rainfall during second half was more than what IMD predicted,” a statement by the agency said.

“We will not consider the rainfall received after this to be monsoon rainfall. It will be counted as post-monsoon season rainfall. IMD considers June, July, August and September as monsoon season,” said M Mohapatra, director general, IMD.

A depression over Saurashtra and the adjoining Gujarat region has moved eastwards and is presently centered over northern parts of Gujarat region. It is very likely to move northeastw­ards and weaken gradually into a wellmarked low pressure area by October 1. Under its influence. widespread to very heavy rainfall is likely over Saurashtra, Kutch, north Gujarat region and southeast Rajasthan till October 2 and isolated heavy rain over north Gujarat region and East Rajasthan is also likely, said experts.

Climate scientists said the IMD had neither updated its monsoon withdrawal date for decades nor factored in changes in recent years. For the last 10 years, the monsoon is beginning its retreat after September 20.

“The northeast monsoon usually arrives in October. We don’t have any update on the northeast monsoon yet,” added Mohapatra.

Out of 36 meteorolog­ical subdivisio­ns, two sub divisions received “large excess” (60% over LPA), 10 received excess (20% to 59% over LPA) and 19 got normal monsoon (-19% to 19% over LPA ) rainfall. But five sub-divisions received deficient rainfall.

In Haryana, Delhi and Chandigarh, the rainfall deficiency was roughly 42%. “On an average, about 20% of area of the country receives deficient or scanty rainfall during the monsoon season,” the IMD said.

The defining feature of this year’s monsoon was the high number of extreme rain events. For example, there were 1,269 weather stations reporting very heavy and extremely heavy rain in August out of which 282 were extremely heavy rainfall events, the highest in the past five years. The data on extreme events is yet to be compiled by IMD.

IMD officials said the delayed withdrawal of the monsoon is a feature of climate variabilit­y. “Monsoon withdrawal always begins from the northwest part of the country. The first and foremost condition to announce monsoon withdrawal is that rainfall should stop completely for about five days, there should be significan­t reduction in moisture and anticyclon­e flow should be establishe­d. None of this has happened yet,” said K Sathi Devi, Head of the National Weather Forecastin­g Centre.

“June to September is the normal monsoon season but variabilit­y can happen. We need to see long-term data to conclude whether this is a result of climate change. Extreme rain events,however, can be definitely linked to climate change,” said Pulak Guhathakur­ta, head, Climate Applicatio­n and User Interface, Climate Research and Services at IMD Pune.

But projection­s made by a team of scientists at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y (IITM) Pune based on various models show an intensific­ation of the southwest monsoon and an increase in the mean monsoon rainfall by mid-century.

“A series of low-pressure systems from the Bay of Bengal are responsibl­e for the monsoon’s delayed withdrawal from Western Rajasthan this year. Conditions had become favourable for the monsoon’s withdrawal from western Rajasthan around September 18. However, a low-pressure circulatio­n [which seeded Tropical Cyclone Hikka in the Arabian Sea] changed the wind pattern over the state and caused a further delay in the monsoon’s withdrawal,” said Akshay Deoras, a doctoral researcher at the department of meteorolog­y, University of Reading .

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