The southwest monsoon, which reached large parts of central, western and eastern India in the last two days, can knock in parts of Delhi, Haryana and Punjab in the next 2 to 3 days. According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), rain is estimated in large parts of northwest India including Haryana, Punjab, Chandigarh, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Eastern Rajasthan, Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh between June 20 and June 25.
According to a report by the news agency PTI, an IMD official has confirmed that the monsoon can reach Delhi by June 22 before June 30. According to the IMD, the rest of the country is expected to rain before the normal date. From the beginning of June, due to lack of rainfall, the temperature increased rapidly, causing people to face heatstroke in large parts of northwest and central India from 8-9 June.
Monsoon reached Kerala on May 24 this year
The monsoon usually knocks in Kerala by June 1, reaches Mumbai by 11 June and till July 8, the whole country receives rain due to the weather system. Around 17 September, begins to retreat from northwest India and go back completely by 15 October. But this year the monsoon reached Kerala on 24 May. Earlier in 2009, it was seen when the monsoon reached Kerala on 23 May.
With the help of a lot of low pressure over the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal, the monsoon moved forward rapidly in the next few days and covered parts of Central Maharashtra and the entire Northeast by 29 May. However, after this, it remained stable for a long time for about 18 days from 29 May to 16 June. According to the IMD, the monsoon progressed rapidly from June 16 to June 18 due to a low pressure area on West Bengal and Gujarat.
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How much rain is expected this time
Meteorologists say that the date of arrival of monsoon is not directly related to the total seasonal rainfall. It is not necessary that it will reach other parts of the country in the same way due to its early or late arrival in Kerala or Mumbai. In May, IMD forecast that India was expected to receive equal rainfall of 87 cm long period average (LPA) during the June-September monsoon season. Rainfall is considered “normal” between 96 percent of this 50 -year average and 104 percent.
Except for Ladakh, areas around Himachal Pradesh, Northeast and parts of Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Odisha, most parts of the country are expected to receive more than normal rainfall. Some different areas of Punjab, Haryana, Kerala and Tamil Nadu can record less than normal rainfall. Monsoon is important for India’s agricultural sector, which is a source of livelihood of about 42 percent of the population and contributes 18.2 percent to the country’s GDP.