Deccan Chronicle

Bad crossflow hits monsoon

■ IMD says monsoon yet to get Arabian Sea traction

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New Delhi, May 26: Unfavourab­le cross-equatorial flow over the Arabian Sea that aids in the progress of the monsoon is one of the reasons for its delay, the national weather agency said on Sunday.

Monsoon reached the Andaman and Nicobar Islands on May 18. But it is yet to cover the entire region, the India Metrologic­al Department said.

Conditions are likely to become favourable for the movement of the southwest monsoon into some more parts of south Bay of Bengal, Andaman Islands and north Andaman Sea during Wednesday-Thursday, the IMD said. It is also expected to make an onset over Kerala on June 6, five days after its normal onset date, it had said.

The weather department said the monsoon was yet to get traction from the Arabian Sea. “The slow pace is because of the lack of crossequat­orial flow in the Arabian Sea,” Mritunjay Mohapatra, the additional director general of the IMD, said.

New Delhi, May 26: Unfavourab­le cross-equatorial flow over the Arabian Sea that aids in the progress of the monsoon is one of the reasons for its delay, the national weather agency said on Sunday.

Mohapatra attributed the sluggish pace to the unfavourab­le MaddenJuli­an oscillatio­n (MJO) and anti-cyclonic circulatio­n over the south Indian Ocean that aids the progress on monsoon.

The MJO can be defined as an eastward moving ‘pulse’ of clouds, rainfall, winds and pressure near the equator that typically recurs every 30-60 days.

The MJO (MaddenJuli­an Oscillatio­n), which is affecting the monsoon, is an eastward moving ‘pulse’ of clouds, rainfall, winds and pressure near the equator every 30-60 days.

It is a traversing phenomenon and is most prominent over the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

The MJO is the second phenomenon that is said to be affecting the monsoon this year. Reports had spoken on an El Nino developing in the Pacific Ocean. This means that the surface waters of the Pacific Ocean see a temperatur­e increas, which is believed to affect the Indian monsoon.

In its bulletin, the Indian Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) said 'fairly widespread to widespread rainfall' activity with isolated heavy fall were very likely to occur over Assam and Meghalaya and subHimalay­an West Bengal, Sikkim on Wednesday and Thursday.

Scattered to fairly-widespread rainfall activity with isolated heavy falls are very likely to occur over south-interior Karnataka from May 26-28 and over Tamil Nadu and Puducherry on TuesdayWed­nesday, it said.

On the other hand, heatwave conditions continue in central Indian and parts of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.

The heatwave is expected in some parts are very likely to continue over Vidarbha and at isolated pockets over central Maharashtr­a, Telangana state, east Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, east Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand and Odisha during the next four-five days, it added.

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