Weather
official: Indian monsoon may arrive in 24 hours
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[June 05, 2014]
By Ratnajyoti Dutta
NEW DELHI (Reuters) -
India's southern coast could witness the arrival of this
year's monsoon in the next day or so after sporadic
rains in recent days heralded the arrival of the wet
season that is crucial to farmers in Asia's
third-largest economy.
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"Conditions have turned favorable for the monsoon onset in about 24
hours," an official of the India Meteorological Department (IMD)
told Reuters on Thursday.
In a typical year, the monsoon begins on or around June 1 but
government forecasters had forecast a five-day delay and
below-average rainfall in this year's wet season.
Rains are vital to rejuvenate an economy battling its longest
economic slowdown since the 1980s and to cool inflation that has
averaged nearly 10 percent for the past two years.
The farm sector accounts for 14 percent of India's nearly $2
trillion economy, with two-thirds of its 1.2 billion population
living in rural areas.
Half of India's farmland still lacks access to irrigation. The
country plans to expand irrigation coverage by at least a tenth by
2017 to cut its dependence on the seasonal rains. Experts said the
spread of rainfall near the southern coast does not qualify for a
formal announcement of the monsoon onset.
Last month, the IMD predicted a delayed onset for this year's
monsoon over the Kerala coast around June 5, give or take four days.
"IMD considers factors such as wind speed, cloud formation with
rainfall quantum before announcing the onset of monsoon," said D.R.
Sikka, former director of Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology.
Heavy rainfall has already reached Sri Lanka, with flooding reported
earlier this week in capital Colombo.
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Usually, it takes around 24-48 hours for the monsoon rains to arrive
on the south of coastal Kerala after crossing northern tip of Sri
Lanka. Sowing operations in rice, pulses and cotton have already
started in many growing areas of Northwest and Southern India,
taking advantage of pre-monsoon showers.
Farmers have taken notice of the farm ministry's advisory to sow
summer crops early this year as the second half of the four-month
rainy season could be witness drier weather due to the El Nino
weather pattern. The Australian Bureau of Meteorology in its latest
update said there is high chance of El Nino weather event this year.
ElNino has the potential to cause severe droughts in Asia Pacific
including India.
(Editing by Douglas Busvine and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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