homeenvironment NewsHow climate scientists predict India’s all important monsoon rains

How climate scientists predict India’s all-important monsoon rains

A monsoon is considered “normal” when rains are 96 percent to 104 percent of the long-term average. Last year fell just outside the range, at 106 percent (the IMD predicted 103 percent rainfall). The prediction this year is for precipitation to reach 96 percent and arrive in Kerala on June 4, slightly later than usual.

By Bloomberg  Jun 2, 2023 5:35:05 PM IST (Published)

4 Min Read

It’s a weather event so decisive for India’s economy that a former president once called it the nation’s "real" finance minister. But climate change is making the annual monsoon more difficult to forecast, and raising the stakes of getting those predictions wrong.
That’s why researchers at the India Meteorological Department have spent more than a decade fine-tuning a new way to divine when, and how much, rain will fall each year. The National Monsoon Mission, which set out in 2012 to move the nation over to a system that relies less on historical patterns and more on real-time, on-the-ground data gathering, is starting to pay off, potentially saving property, crops, and even lives.
"It was stressful work," said Madhavan Nair Rajeevan, who led the effort as secretary of the Ministry of Earth Sciences. Indian scientists consider more than 10 existing global climate models — including the state-run Monsoon Mission Climate Forecast System — downloading a vast amount of data to test them out – and narrow it down to four or five that perform best on South Asian weather. “We didn’t give any deadline for the project to finish,” Rajeevan said. “Wherever research was being done, we used to send scientists to get trained.”