The southwest (June to September) and northeast (October to December) monsoons are crucial for India’s agriculture and economy with more than 50 percent of the net sown area in the country depending on the rain, which contributes to 40 percent of the total production. More than half of India’s population (55 percent) is engaged in agricultural and allied sectors, and well-distributed rainfall during the kharif and rabi seasons is essential for agricultural production in the country.
Monsoons are also crucial for meeting the growing water needs of the population and will play an important role in meeting India’s clean energy aspirations in the future.
<p><em>But the Indian monsoon is changing in recent years. While the monsoon is known to be highly variable, climate change is bringing about unexpected changes in monsoon patterns and decoding these changes to know how it will impact monsoon variability in the years to come is crucial for the Indian economy and sustainable development argues this report titled '<a href="https://www.ceew.in/publications/decoding-changing-monsoon-rainfall-patterns-due-to-climate-change-in-india">Decoding India's changing monsoon patterns: A Tehsil level assessment</a>' by <a href="https://www.ceew.in/">Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW).</a></em></p>
Available literature on monsoon predicts increased rainfall in core monsoon regions in both the medium term (up to 2050) and long term (up to 2100) under different representative concentration pathways (RCPs). However, the report argues that these assessments have focused on long term trends at coarse resolutions and have not been able to look at intricate variations within seasons and across months and days and within individual districts.
The report discusses the outcomes of a study that has conducted India’s first sub-district -level monsoon variability assessment namely at the level of tehsils, talukas, mandals, circles and sub-divisions. The study refers to them as tehsils to align with the nomenclature used across the country to refer to administrative units.
The study aimed at understanding how rainfall patterns are changing across India during the southwest and northeast monsoon in terms of inter-annual variability (year-to-year variability) and intra-annual variability (changes within months and wet and dry extremes). The most recent 12-km high-resolution reanalysis data sourced from the Indian Monsoon Data Assimilation and Analysis project (IMDAA) was used for the analysis.
The study found that:
The report argues that:
The increasing variability of monsoon and extreme rainfall events call for the need for localised decision-making to build resilience against monsoon extremes. While IMD provides monsoon information at country, zonal, state, meteorological sub-division, and district scales based on existing observation stations, this network lacks information on the monsoons at a more granular level. It is thus essential that local level decision-makers should use granular metrics used in this study for analysing local-level monsoon performance to help action and enhance disaster preparedness and response.
Making district-level climate action plans and integrating them with socioeconomic and sector-specific data can be greatly useful for detailed climate risk assessments in critical sectors like agriculture, water, and energy. Collaboration among research institutions, meteorological agencies, and civil society is important to make this climate information more accessible for a diverse range of stakeholders.
Diverse monsoon patterns at the tehsil level call for the need to have hyperlocal climate adaptation strategies. The current available long-term observational rainfall data lacks the granularity required for precise climate models and local action plans.
<p><em>The report states that alternative sources such as the Automatic Weather Stations (AWSs) and citizen science can help in expanding the network of observation stations. Initiatives such as the national Weather Information Network and Data System (WINDS) and community efforts such as school students in Kerala recording micro-weather data offer promising avenues to enhance the assessment of micro-climatic rainfall variations and inform effective local strategies, which should be scaled up, argues the report.</em></p>