Monsoon reaches Delhi, three days ahead

System has covered most of the country: IMD

June 26, 2011 03:04 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 01:19 am IST - New Delhi

Delhiites welcome the rain with umbrellas and smiles near India Gate. Photo: S. Subramanium

Delhiites welcome the rain with umbrellas and smiles near India Gate. Photo: S. Subramanium

The much-awaited south-west monsoon has reached Delhi, three days before the normal date of June 29, announced the India Meteorological Department on Sunday.

The system also advanced further over West Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, and Haryana and parts of Rajasthan, the IMD bulletin said.

The northern limit of the system passed through Porbandar, Ahmedabad, Udaipur, Ajmer, Pilani and Ganganagar.

The monsoon has now covered most of the country, barring some areas in Rajasthan. The system could cover more ground over the next three to four days, according to the IMD.

“Fairly widespread rain/thundershowers would occur over the western Himalayan region, Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, east Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh, as well as Central, east and northeast India and the west coast [during the next three days].”

However, as for the southern peninsular region, comprised of Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Pondicherry, Lakshadweep, and Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the rainfall activity, it said, could remain subdued at least over the next three days in the interior areas.

The system had been advancing without a break since having set in over Kerala on May 29. Considering that active and break phases are an integral part of the system, meteorologists are waiting for a break sooner than later.

Addressing a press conference earlier this week, IMD Director General Ajit Tyagi had predicted that it could go into a weak phase during the first half of next month.

Monsoon forecast models, he said, indicated that rainfall for the country as a whole during July could be just 93 per cent of the long period average (LPA), and that for August, 94 per cent.

Models also indicated that the rainfall during the four-month season could be below normal, at 95 per cent of the LPA, with the southern peninsular region receiving the least rainfall at 93 per cent of the region's LPA, and the north-west region getting the highest rainfall, at 97 per cent of the LPA.

The rainfall over the other two regions, Central and the north-east India, is expected to fall in between, at 95 per cent of their LPA.

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