Shifting Monsoon Patterns

In Context

  • Monsoon rainfall in India has been surplus by around 7% this year though with extreme inequity. 

More about the monsoon review

  • Surplus precipitation:
    • Central and southern India saw a sharp surge in rainfall. 
    • Rains in Central India were surplus by 20% and in southern India by 25%, with the last month seeing several instances of flooding in Kerala, Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh. 
  • Deficit:
    • On the other hand, large parts of U. P., Bihar, Odisha have seen large deficits. The east and northeast of India have reported a 17% shortfall and the northwest 2%. 
  • Impact on agriculture:
    • This has impacted the sowing of the kharif, or summer crop
    • Rice production:
      • Paddy planting has been impacted with sown area 5.51% lower than last year, according to the Agriculture Ministry. 
      • The Centre is expecting a minimum of six-million-tonne shortfall in rice production and this is likely to elevate inflation.
  • Worldwide implications:
    • During the last six months, entire South Asia has been reporting a series of extreme weather events. 
    • While Bangladesh, India and Pakistan have battled severe floods, China is reeling under massive drought conditions.

Causes:

  • La Nina:
    • These heavy rains are premised on a La Nina, the converse phenomenon of the El Nino.
    • While, El Ninos is linked to reduced rains over India, La Ninas indicate surplus rainfall. 
    • ‘Triple dip’ La Nina:
      • India is seeing an extended spell of the La Nina, called a ‘triple dip’ La Nina which is a phenomenon lasting across three winter seasons in the northern hemisphere. 
    • The retreat of the monsoon:
      • This is only the third time since 1950 that a triple-dip La Nina has been observed. 
      • This, in part, is why for the third year in a row, India is seeing surplus rain in September, a month that usually marks the retreat of the monsoon.
  • Human-induced climate change:
    • It amplifies the impacts of naturally occurring events like La Niña and is increasingly influencing our weather patterns.
    • Extreme El Niño and La Niña events may increase in frequency from about one every 20 years to one every 10 years by the end of the 21st century under aggressive greenhouse gas emission scenarios.

What is the monsoon Onset & withdrawal/retreat?

  • The onset of monsoon:
    • The monsoon is a sea breeze that has consistently landed in the Indian sub-continent for thousands of years. 
    • It enters mainland India between the last week of May and the first week of June
      • June 1 is its official onset date over Kerala. 
    • The IMD only counts the rainfall between June 1 and September 30 as monsoon rainfall. 
  • The retreat of the monsoon:
    • This doesn’t mean that the monsoon system ceases to pour rain over India from October 1. 
      • In fact, monsoon-related rain can continue well into the first fortnight of October and only really retreats from India by late October
      • It is then replaced by the retreating, or northeast monsoon in November which is the key source of rainfall for several parts of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and north interior Karnataka.
    • More technically, withdrawal is a cessation of rainfall activity over northwest India for five straight days, an anticyclone establishing itself in the lower troposphere and a marked reduction in moisture content

Effects of Monsoon on Indian Subcontinent

  • The Indian landscape, it’s animal and plant life, its entire agricultural calendar and the life of the people, including their festivities, revolve around this phenomenon.
  • Agriculture & economy:
    • It accounts for 18 percent of India’s growth domestic product (GDP) and employs around half of its total workforce. The monsoon rains are the main source of water for 55 percent of the country’s arable land. This means the rains are crucial — not only for India’s farmers but for its economy as a whole.
  • Rivers:
    • The monsoon brings water and sediment not only to Indian rivers but also to rivers in China, Bangladesh, etc. 
  • Festivals:
    • There are numerous traditional fasts and festivals celebrated during the wet season, some of them are Ganga Dussehra, Rath Yatras, Kanwarias, Janmashtami, Barsha Mongol Ramadan and Splash fairs are one of the most important parts of all monsoon festivals.

Way Ahead

  • Slow onsets can still be taken care of through adaptation and resilience ideas but these kinds of big events are very difficult to cope with
    • That is where the main issue lies as the country would then have to divert development money to climate finance to combat climate change.
  • Agriculture:
    • India’s hundreds of millions of rice producers and consumers are being affected negatively by these unprecedented changes which are also raising concerns over food security.
      • Short-term actions & solutions:
        • In UP, the Agriculture Meteorology division has advised carrying out the transplantation of rice and suggested the use of short-duration rice varieties
          • Experts have encouraged the cultivation of red gram.
          • Farmers are also recommended to opt for inter-cropping.
        • For farmers in Jharkhand, the Agrimet has suggested adopting measures to conserve moisture in the soil. 
          • No sowing is advised until there is 50 to 60mm rainfall and sufficient moisture for at least three consecutive days. 
        • Short-duration rice, millet, maize, and arhar.
  • Limiting warming:
    • The current atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations are higher than at any time in the last two million years. 
    • To align with a 1.5°C target of limiting warming, global CO2 emissions must reach net zero around 2050, with global GHG emissions reaching net-zero 15-20 years later. 

Source: TH

 
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