India expected to see normal monsoon rains, to boost crop output

A spell of good rains could lift farm and wider economic growth and help bring down food price inflation

By Reuters

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People ride a scooter on Outer Ring Road during rain in Bengaluru on April 3, 2023. — PTI
People ride a scooter on Outer Ring Road during rain in Bengaluru on April 3, 2023. — PTI

Published: Tue 11 Apr 2023, 1:40 PM

Last updated: Tue 11 Apr 2023, 1:41 PM

India is likely to receive normal monsoon rainfall in 2023, the state-run weather office said on Tuesday, the fifth straight year of normal or above normal summer rains that spur farm and overall economic growth in Asia's third-biggest economy.

A spell of good rains could lift farm and wider economic growth and help bring down food price inflation, which jumped in recent months and prompted the central bank to raise lending rates.


The rains, which usually lash the southern tip of Kerala state around June 1 and retreat by September, are expected to total 96 per cent of the long-term average this year, M. Ravichandran, secretary at the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), told a news conference.

The India Meteorological Department (IMD) defines average, or normal, rainfall as ranging between 96 per cent and 104 per cent of a 50-year average of 87cm (35 inches) for the four-month season.


Private weather forecasting agency Skymet on Monday forecast India could get below normal monsoon rains in 2023, with an increasing likelihood of El-Nino, which typically brings dry weather to Asia.

El-Nino could have an impact on monsoon rainfall in the second half of the season, but other factors — such sea temperature changes known as the Indian Ocean Dipole — favour good rainfall, said Mrutyunjay Mohapatra, director general of the IMD.

"All El-Nino years are not bad monsoon years. About 40 per cent of the El-Nino years in the past were years with normal or above normal monsoon rainfall," Mohapatra said.

For the first time in more than two decades, India would see average or above average rainfall for five straight years, IMD data showed.

El Nino weather is unlikely to have any impact on production of summer-sown crops and there is no need to worry about the sowing pattern, Ravichandran said.

Other than watering farms and recharging aquifers and reservoirs, regular rains during the monsoon season can bring relief from the searing heat.


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