“We are hopeful of more accuracy in the monsoon forecast by 2017 with this collaborative research initiative”
Reuters/New Delhi
India has roped in almost all the world’s major weather forecasters in its effort to accurately forecast monsoon rains in the next four years, the country’s top weather official said, raising prospects for a rise of up to 15% in farm output.
Getting monsoon forecasts right is essential for Asia’s third-biggest economy, of nearly $2tn. Agriculture, employing more than half India’s population of 1.2bn, contributes about 15% to this figure.
India’s 235mn farmers rely on monsoon rains from June to September to water more than half the farm area in the world’s second-biggest producer of rice, wheat and sugar, as only about 45% of arable land has irrigation facilities.
“About half-a-dozen Indian, and almost an equal number of foreign, weather offices have joined hands to help us bring more precision in forecasting,” L S Rathore, director-general of the state-run India Meteorological Department (IMD), said.
“We are hopeful of more accuracy in the monsoon forecast by 2017 with this collaborative research initiative,” he added.
The IMD, which initially tied up with Britain and the US, has also teamed up with the weather offices of Japan, Australia and South Korea.
The department aims to deploy more radars and observatories on the ground and completely overhaul its mathematical model as the two main thrusts of its new programme, Rathore said.
The National Centre for Ocean Information Services, the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology and the National Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting are among the Indian bodies involved in the collaboration.
The Indian weather office now forecasts monsoon rains based on its long-term rainfall data for the past 130 years. It also considers ocean temperatures and atmospheric pressure.
There are two annual forecasts, one in April and the other in June, after the monsoon rains cover half the country.
The improved model would help the IMD issue four to five monsoon forecasts instead of two, and provide region-specific information as well, Rathore said.
“Almost all premier institutions of the world and India are involved in the exercise to take a look at the whole gamut of the meteorological process to sharpen our forecast,” he said.
India has been able to accurately forecast monsoons, but finds it hard to predict extreme weather events such as drought, he said, adding that the new effort would end that handicap.
The IMD failed to foresee the worst drought in nearly four decades in 2009. As a result, rice output fell and India had to import sugar, sending global prices to a 30-year high.
“Precision in the monsoon forecast can raise farm production by 10% to 15% in rainfed areas,” said Ravinder Singh, head of agricultural physics at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute.
Accurate forecasts would eliminate such sharp output swings as farmers would choose drought-resistant crop varieties and the government would make timely contingency plans, Rathore said.
The Indian weather office has twice gone wrong in its forecast during the eight years since 2005, in 2009 and 2007.
It predicted an average monsoon year in 2009 but the season ended with a rainfall deficit of 22%, making for the worst monsoon in nearly four decades.
In 2007, in contrast to the forecast of below average rainfall, the 2007 monsoon turned out to be above average.
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