IMD revises normal onset, withdrawal dates for monsoon
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has revised the normal onset and withdrawal dates of monsoon this year.
A press release from the Ministry of Earth Sciences said that the present normal monsoon onset and withdrawal dates are based on records of only a few stations (149 stations) during the period 1901-1940.
The IMD has now revised the normal onset and withdrawal dates based on recent data. The normal dates of onset are revised based on data during 1961-2019 and normal dates of withdrawal are revised based on data during 1971-2019.
"The IMD has designed new objective criteria for defining monsoon onset over the entire country based on daily gridded (1 o x1o ) rainfall data set. The new objective criteria used for deciding monsoon onset/progress dates are designed so as to closely simulate IMD's operational onset dates. However, the new withdrawal dates are fixed using the IMD's operational withdrawal dates during 1971-2019," adds the press release.
It further says: "The monsoon onset over Kerala remains the same, that is, June 1. However, new monsoon advance dates over the states like Maharashtra, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Jharkhand, Bihar and parts of Uttar Pradesh are delayed by 3-7 days as compared to existing normal dates. However, over extreme northwest India, the monsoon arrives now little earlier, on July 8 as compared to the existing date of July 15."
"There are, however, appreciable changes in the monsoon withdrawal dates, especially over the northwest and the Central India. Monsoon withdraws from the northwest India almost 7-14 days later from the existing dates. There is no change in the final withdrawal date over south India, i.e., October 15. These new dates are relevant for many applications like agriculture, water and power management, etc," added the press release.
-ANI
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