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This Article is From Jul 09, 2015

Rainfall Down in July, Negative in All Regions Except North-West: Weather Office

In signs of a deficient monsoon, India has experienced a drop in rainfall in July and almost all regions except the North-West have started registering negative precipitation.

Rainfall Down in July, Negative in All Regions Except North-West: Weather Office
New Delhi: In signs of a deficient monsoon, India has experienced a drop in rainfall in July and almost all regions except the North-West have started registering negative precipitation.

According to the India Meteorological Department, from June 1 to July 8, the country registered an overall deficit rainfall of 4 per cent. Incidentally, the figure until Wednesday was minus 2 per cent.

Central India, which received a good amount of rainfall in June, has recorded a negative rainfall of minus 8 per cent, followed by the Southern peninsula (minus 7 per cent) and in the East and North-East India (minus 4 per cent).

Barring North-West India, the entire country has started registering negative precipitation, but the rainfall there is also declining over the past few days.

IMD has already predicted a "deficient" monsoon with the country expected to receive 88 per cent of rainfall.

Although June recorded 16 per cent more rainfall than its normal limit, the country's weather agency has predicted 8 and 10 per cent less rainfall for July and August.

Skymet, a private weather forecasting agency, has predicted "above normal" rainfall (104 per cent) in July and "normal" rainfall in August (99 per cent) and in September (96 per cent).

"The two most weather active pockets during Southwest Monsoon in India are the West Coast and Northeast India. Despite maintaining a healthy normal rainfall record, the amount of rain witnessed in these places during the first week of July this year has remained on the lower side."

"Subdued rainfall activity has kept Kerala deficient by 30 per cent, coastal Karnataka by 32 per cent, and Konkan and Goa by 15 per cent," Skymet said.

The Indian Council for Agricultural Research (ICAR), and agriculture research body, had last week said sufficient rains are required to save pulses, oilseeds and cotton crops in rain-fed areas of central and southern India.

A good spell of rain is also necessary for completion of the remaining 70 per cent of sowing of kharif crops in many parts of the country, it added.

Amid forecast of deficit rains this month, the government has asked farmers not to panic as contingency plans were being put in place to handle any adverse impact of a possible poor monsoon on kharif crops.

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