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Monsoon anticipation: On the monsoon in 2025

Monsoon anticipation : On the monsoon in 2025. 

Despite the prediction of normal rainfall, India must be ready for extremes. 

The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has given a reassuring signal that from June to September, India is likely to receive ‘above normal’ monsoon rainfall, or 5% more than the historical average of 87 cm. Were this to pan out as projected, it would be a second consecutive year of ‘above normal’ rains. Last year, India received 8% more monsoon rain than what is typical from June to September. This is good news for kharif sowing, which will help improve stocks of grain and shore up reserves for exports. This year the government has also committed to procure, at the minimum support prices, pulses in an attempt to reduce the import bill. As pulses are a more land-intensive crop than cereal, good rains are essential for an adequate harvest. The IMD follows a two-stage system of monsoon forecasts: the first in April, followed by an update in mid-May, which has additional information on rainfall distribution. These are regularly updated monthly, alongside a host of short-term forecasts. Thus, what is forecast in April may not exactly unfurl itself given the limitations of meteorological science and the computational tools required. However, this year, there is certainty about the absence of an El Niño. Associated with a warming of the Equatorial Pacific and with six out of 10 years linked to weak monsoon rain, a monsoon without an El Niño augurs well for India. Another encouraging factor is a parameter called the ‘Eurasian snow cover,’ or snow cover areas of northern hemisphere and Eurasia (January-March, 2025). These were ‘below normal,’ and, according to IMD meteorologists, have an ‘inverse relationship’ with that year’s summer monsoon rainfall. An inverse relationship means that less snow corresponds to more rain.

For its monsoon forecasts, the IMD uses weather models that simulate the ocean and the atmosphere. This year, except for the El Niño, none of the ‘oceanic parameters’ indicates either way — how the monsoon will pan out. This is not unusual but means that factors closer to the sub-continent – cyclonic activity in the Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea for instance — will have greater importance to the monsoon. Past years with above normal rainfall have brought flooding and landslides, accentuated by the challenges of global warming. Kerala’s Wayanad disaster in July last year, that killed at least 200 people and displaced several times that number, is just one instance. Therefore, positive news on the monsoon front should not distract the focus of the Centre and States from putting in place adequate infrastructure to minimise damage and the loss of lives.

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Anticipation
(noun) – expectation, hope

प्रत्याशा, पूर्वानुमान

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Prediction (noun) – forecast, prophecy, divination, prognosis,

भविष्यवाणी

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Reassure
(verb) – encourage, assure, comfort, hearten, console

आश्वस्त करना

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Pan out (phrasal verb) – turn out, unfold, result, develop, happen

जैसा होना

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Project
(verb) – Plan, envisage, propose, intend, anticipate, expect

अनुमान लगाना

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Sowing (noun) – Planting, seeding, disseminating, broadcasting

बुआई

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Shore up
(phrasal verb) – bolster, reinforce ,hold up, support, buttress
मजबूत करना

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Commit
(verb) – Obligate, pledge, promise, compel

प्रतिबद्ध होना

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Procure
(verb) – obtain, acquire, get, find, come by

प्राप्त करना

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Minimum Support Price (MSP) (noun) – The price at which the government purchases crops from farmers, intended to support farmers by ensuring minimum profits for their harvest

न्यूनतम समर्थन मूल्य

 

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Land-intensive (adjective) – space-demanding, large-area requiring, extensive

खेती योग्य भूमि पर आधारित

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Alongside
(adverb) – Together with, along with, in conjunction with

साथ - साथ

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A host of (phrase) – A large number or a multitude of people or things.

बड़ी संख्या

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Forecast
(noun) – prediction, estimate, forewarning, prognostication, guess

पूर्वानुमान

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Unfurl (verb) – unfold, develop, reveal, come forth, play out

सामने आना

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Given
(preposition) – considering, taking into account, bearing in mind

देखते हुए

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Limitation
(noun) – a condition of limited ability; a defect or failing

बाधा

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Meteorological
(adjective) – related to the weather or changes in the Earth's atmosphere

मौसम संबंधी

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Computational
(adjective) – Calculative, Numeric, Algorithmic, Mathematical, Quantitative

गणनात्मक

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El Niño (noun) – a period during which a warm water current develops in the Pacific Ocean near South America and causes changes to the weather in many parts of the world  अल नीनो

(प्रशांत महासागर में तापमान बढ़ने की जलवायु स्थिति)

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Augur well (phrase) – Bode well, promise well, be a good sign, forecast good results

अच्छा संकेत देना

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Meteorologist
(noun) – an expert in or student of meteorology; a weather forecaster.

मौसम विज्ञानी

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Inverse (adjective) – opposite, reverse, contrary, negative

विपरीत

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Correspond (verb) – Match, tally, equate, coincide, agree

मेल खाना

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Simulate
(verb) – Imitate, reproduce, mimic, replicate, emulate

अनुकरण करना

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For instance
(phrase) –As an example

.उदाहरण के लिए

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Accentuate
(verb) – emphasize, stress, lay the stress on, place the stress on ज़ोर देना

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Global warming (noun) – Increase in Earth's average temperature due to greenhouse gases

वैश्विक तापन

 

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Displaced
(adjective) – Uprooted, relocated, removed, displaced.

विस्थापित

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Front (noun) – Area, sector, field, domain, realm

क्षेत्र

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Distract (verb) – Divert, Mislead, Confuse, Disturb, Sidetrack

ध्यान भटकाना

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Put in place (phrase) – establish, implement, arrange, set up, enforce

लागू करना

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Infrastructure
(noun) – structure, framework, frame, form, make-up

आधारभूत संरचना

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Consecutive
(adjective) – sequential, successive, serial, sequent, continuous

लगातार