Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

GONE IN 7 DAYS? MONSOON RETREATING 6 TIMES FASTER

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The behaviour of this year’s monsoon is getting curiouser and curiouser — after beginning to withdraw only on October 9, well after the usual date of September 1, the latest withdrawal since at least 1961, it has, in the span of five days, retreated from most parts of the country and, in the next few days, will be gone completely, according to the IMD.

In other words, it will take nine days to do what it usually does over 45 days.

But that is perhaps only to be expected of what has been a very peculiar monsoon characteri­sed by a delayed onset, an extremely dry June, a near deluge in several states in August and September, and, of course, a delayed withdrawal. This year, IMD announced monsoon withdrawal on October 9, with the establishm­ent of an anti-cyclonic circulatio­n in the lower tropospher­ic level over northwest India, and a gradual reduction in moisture and rainfall.

NEWDELHI: The behaviour of this year’s monsoon is getting curiouser and curiouser — after beginning to withdraw only on October 9, well after the usual date of September 1, the latest withdrawal since at least 1961, it has, in the span of five days, retreated from most parts of the country and, in the next few days, will be gone completely, according to the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD).

In other words, it will take nine days to do what it usually does over 45 days.

But that is perhaps only to be expected of what has been a very peculiar monsoon characteri­sed by a delayed onset, an extremely dry June, a near deluge in several states in August and September, and, of course, a delayed withdrawal.

This year, IMD announced monsoon withdrawal on October 9, with the establishm­ent of an anti-cyclonic circulatio­n in the lower tropospher­ic level over northwest India, and a gradual reduction in moisture and rainfall. But what is typically a gradual process was almost over in five days.

On Monday, IMD’s bulletin stated: “The southwest monsoon has further withdrawn from the remaining parts of the north Arabian Sea, some parts of the Central Arabian Sea, remaining parts of Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh, some parts of Konkan, Madhya Maharashtr­a, Marathwada and Vidarbha, some parts of south India, some more parts of Chhattisga­rh, some parts of Odisha, entire Jharkhand, Bihar and Sub-Himalayan West Bengal and Sikkim, some more parts of Gangetic West Bengal , entire northeast India and some parts of north Bay of Bengal.”

The pace of withdrawal stands out. For instance, in 2016 rainfall activity over the northweste­rn parts of Rajasthan remained subdued since September 5, marking the beginning of the process. A change over in the lower tropospher­ic circulatio­n pattern over the region from cyclonic to anti cyclonic was establishe­d on September 15. Further withdrawal of monsoon from more parts of northwest India took place on October 5 with the southward shift of the subtropica­l westerly jet stream.

“This year monsoon withdrawal is unusually quick. It normally takes 45 days. This year between October 9 and 14, monsoon has already withdrawn from most parts of northwest India, central India, Chhattisga­rh, Bihar, Konkan, Goa etc. Wind patterns changed very quickly to northweste­rly from easterly due to formation of an anti-cyclone over western parts of Rajasthan,” said Mahesh Palawat, vice president, climate change and meteorolog­y, Skymet Weather.

IMD scientists admit the pace of withdrawal has been unusual.

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