India’s monsoon rains hit four-year high in boost to crop output

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

Another good monsoon for India:

MUMBAI (Reuters) – India’s monsoon rainfall this year was its highest since 2020, with above-average precipitation for three consecutive months, helping the country recover from last year’s drought, the state-run weather department said on Monday.

India’s annual monsoon provides almost 70% of the rain it needs to water farms and replenish reservoirs and aquifers, and is the lifeblood of a nearly $3.5 trillion economy. Without irrigation, nearly half of Indian farmland depends on the rains that usually run from June to September.

Rainfall over the country from June through September was 107.6% of its long period average, the highest since 2020, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).

India received 11.6% more rainfall than average in September, following 9% and 15.3% above-average rainfall in July and August respectively, the IMD data showed.

Above-average rainfall in September, arising from a delayed monsoon withdrawal, damaged some summer-sown crops like rice, cotton, soybean, corn, and pulses in certain regions of India.

However, the rains may also enhance soil moisture, benefiting the planting of winter-sown crops such as wheat, rapeseed, and chickpea.

India badly needed good rainfall in 2024 after its driest year in five years in 2023, which depleted reservoir levels and trimmed production of some crops. This forced New Delhi to impose curbs on exports of rice, sugar and onions.

Rainfall distribution was generally good, which helped farmers expand areas under most crops, said Ashwini Bansod, vice president, commodities research at Phillip Capital India.

“This means we could have larger harvests of some summer-sown crops, potentially helping the government to relax trade restrictions in certain cases,” she said.

India on Saturday lifted curbs on exports of non-basmati white rice. That came a day after New Delhi cut export duty on parboiled rice to 10%, buoyed by a new crop in the offing and higher inventories in state warehouses.

https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/indias-monsoon-rains-hit-four-121413615.html

A wetter than normal monsoon is always good news for India. It is a boost for the whole economy. As well as the obvious benefits for agriculture, it also fills the reservoirs, increasing hydro power.

This year, rainfall was 7.6% above average during the monsoon season, June to September:

https://mausam.imd.gov.in/imd_latest/contents/rainfall_time_series.php

Reuters refer to last year’s “drought”, but rainfall was actually well within the normal range. In India they only classify below 90% of average as drought. As the chart below shows, there have been no severe droughts for several years.

Droughts tend to be associated with El Nino, as in 2015.

One long period of severe drought stands out, the 1960s to 80s, which was directly linked to global cooling. This episode was part of the wider drought belt, which extended from the Sahel in Africa, across the Middle East as through India as far as China.

In contrast, global warming between the 1920s and 40s brought plentiful rain for India.

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Tom Halla
October 3, 2024 6:08 pm

What a pity for the Green Blob warming positively affects India. Everything associated with warming must be bad, by faith.

Reply to  Tom Halla
October 3, 2024 7:58 pm

What rain is wet? And it’s falling in India? During monsoon season?
Can’t be.
The BBC just heard that India is drying up.
No Monsoon for You. Come Back 6 months.
/s

October 3, 2024 8:02 pm

Catastrophic AGW!

1.4 billion people have more food, but four ants drowned. Therefore it is a catastrophe and we must cleanse the atmosphere of the evil CO2 molecule.

October 4, 2024 6:30 am

Nice example of natural variability.
The Trend line on the final graph eyeballs to a faint cycle of ~ 80-100 years.
Clearly ENSO is correlated, but might Indian Ocean currents also be related?

And note the lack of correspondence if you superimpose the Mauna Loa CO2 curve on the graph.

Sparta Nova 4
October 4, 2024 8:46 am

One thing this and all of the other reports, good and evil, do is raise awareness of how interconnected the world really is.

A shame the Climate Syndicate is intent on dividing the world into bite sized chunks that they can chew out of existence.

Edward Katz
October 4, 2024 2:13 pm

How can this be happening when the BBC recently reported that the Indian monsoon was drying up so that we should all expect food shortages to develop from lowered crop yields. This of course would lead to increasing starvation levels, declining birth rates and overall population losses. Except none of this is happening since FAO numbers show normal fluctuations in agricultural output and certainly nothing to worry about. The only ones that would want the monsoon rains to drop precipitously would be the eco-alarmists because they’re always looking for some I-told-you-so sort of bad news regardless of whether it actually exists.

O figures show only normal fluctuation in crop yields

rtj1211
Reply to  Edward Katz
October 4, 2024 11:36 pm

How can it be that you actually consider the BBC to be a source worthy of quoting where weather and climate is concerned?

They are a pressure group, not a source of journalism.