BusinessLine (Kolkata)

Pre-monsoon showers fan out over most parts of country

- Vinson Kurian

Pre-monsoon thundersto­rms are blooming over almost the entire landscape of the country — nowhere as growingly virulent as over the South Peninsula during the next 4-5 days — accompanie­d as they are by a fusillade of sharp showers or heavy rain, high winds, hail storms or lightning at many places.

India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) said as many as 26 of the 36 meteorolog­ical subdivisio­ns may witness isolated to scattered to fairly widespread to widespread showers over the next seven days under the watch of visiting western disturbanc­es over North-West India, and troughs/lines of wind discontinu­ity or fleeting circulatio­ns over the rest of the country.

Troughs/lines of wind discontinu­ity are decidedly pre-monsoonal type, while western disturbanc­es originatin­g from the Mediterran­ean and travelling across Iran, Afghanista­n and Pakistan enter NorthWest India amplifying weather over North-West, East and North-East India.

Moisture-laden air gets lifted by these formations to get cooled and, in turn, precipitat­e as rain or hail.

On Friday, an East-West trough ran down from North-West Rajasthan to South Assam across Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, and the plains of West Bengal.

RAIN DEFICIT

Troughs are veritable minefields with embedded cyclonic circulatio­ns that trigger the ascending motion of air. Such circulatio­ns emerged over North-West

The European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts expects the South Peninsula to receive excess rainfall (in red and yellow) during the week ending May 17

Rajasthan, Central Madhya Pradesh and North-East Assam.

A second trough originated from a circulatio­n over North Bihar towards North Odisha across Jharkhand and plains of West Bengal. Cyclonic circulatio­ns hung also over South Kerala and the North-East Arabian Sea o the Gujarat coast. These circulatio­ns can die out during the course of a few hours to days, depending on moisture feed and a favourable wind pattern.

Pre-monsoon has so far delivered a rain deficit of 16 per cent for the country as a whole, with South Peninsula recording the worst at -55 per cent.

East and North-East India have recorded rain deficits of -27 per cent and -2 per cent, respective­ly, while Central India returned a surplus of +64 per cent.

The forecast for May 915 indicates excess showers for Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Maharashtr­a and East India. Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka may extend the gains into the third week (until May 23).

 ?? ?? HEAVY RAINS.
HEAVY RAINS.

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