The climate is always hot like a dessert
India's
unique geography
and geology
strongly influence its climate; this is particularly true of the
Himalayas
in the north and the Thar
Desert in the northwest. The Himalayas act as a barrier
to the frigid
katabatic winds flowing
down from
Central Asia. Thus,
North India is kept warm or only mildly cold
during winter; in summer, the same phenomenon makes India
relatively hot.
Although the Tropic of Cancer
—the boundary between the tropics and
subtropics—passes through the middle of India, the whole country is
considered to be tropical.
As in much of the tropics, monsoonal and other weather conditions
in India are unstable: major droughts, floods, cyclones and other
natural disasters are sporadic, but have killed or displaced
millions. India's long-term climatic stability is further
threatened by
global warming.
Climatic diversity in India makes the analysis of these issues
complex.
History
During the
Late Permian (some
260–251
Ma), the
Indian subcontinent was part of the vast
supercontinent Pangaea.
Despite its position within a high-latitude
belt at 55–75° S (as opposed to its current position between 5
and 35° N), latitudes now occupied by Greenland
and parts of the Antarctic Peninsula
, India likely experienced a humid temperate climate
with warm, frost-free weather, though with well-defined
seasons. Later, India joined the southern supercontinent
Gondwana, a process beginning some
550–500 Ma.
During the Late Paleozoic, Gondwana extended from a point at or
near the South
Pole
to near the equator, where the Indian craton (stable continental crust) was positioned,
resulting in a mild climate favourable to hosting high-biomass ecosystems.
This is underscored by India's vast coal reserves—much of it from
the late Paleozoic sedimentary sequence—the fourth-largest reserves
in the world. During the
Mesozoic, the
world, including India, was considerably warmer than today. With
the coming of the
Carboniferous,
global cooling stoked extensive
glaciation, which spread northwards from
South Africa towards India; this cool
period lasted well into the
Permian.
Tectonic movement by the Indian Plate caused it to pass over a geologic
hotspot—the Réunion hotspot—now occupied by the
volcanic island of Réunion
.
This
resulted in a massive flood basalt
event that laid down the Deccan Traps
some 60–68 Ma, at the end of the Cretaceous period. This may have
contributed to the global
Cretaceous-Tertiary
extinction event, which caused India to experience
significantly reduced
insolation.
Elevated atmospheric levels of sulphur gases formed
aerosols such as
sulfur
dioxide and
sulfuric acid, similar
to those found in the
atmosphere of
Venus; these precipitated as
acid
rain. Elevated
carbon dioxide
emissions also contributed to the
greenhouse effect, causing
warmer weather that lasted long after the
atmospheric shroud of dust and aerosols had cleared. Further
climatic changes 20 million years ago, long after India had crashed
into the
Laurasian landmass, were severe
enough to cause the extinction of many endemic Indian forms. The
formation of the Himalayas resulted in blockage of frigid Central
Asian air, preventing it from reaching India; this made its climate
significantly warmer and more tropical in character than it would
otherwise have been.
Regions
[[File:India average annual
temperature map en.svg|thumb|right|alt="India Average Temperature
Map": A map of India overlaid with five zones. A violet zone, with
ambient temperatures averaging less than 20.0 degrees Celsius,
envelops Himalayan and trans-Himalayan India, as well as the Khasi
Hills on the Meghalaya Plateau. A transitionary blue zone of
between 20.0 and 22.5 degrees, lies just south of the violet areas;
another blue area lies in the extreme southwest of the country,
focused on the high Western Ghats. Two contiguous green areas
(averaging 22.5 to 25.0 degrees) envelop the blue regions, with the
northern one snaking into the Vindhya Range of central India. The
remaining yellow and red areas, designating average temperatures
above 25.0 degrees Celsius, constitute by far the greater part of
the country.|Average annual temperatures across India:
|
( 68.0 °F) |
|
(68.0–72.5 °F) |
|
(72.5–77.0 °F) |
|
(77.0–81.5 °F) |
|
(> 81.5 °F) |
]] |
[[File:India climatic zone map
en.svg|thumb|right|alt="India Climatic Zone Map".|Climatic zones in
India, based on the Köppen classification
system:
|
E |
(ETh) |
|
C |
(Cfa) |
|
A |
(Aw) |
|
A |
(Am) |
|
B |
(BSh) |
|
B |
(BWh) |
]] |
India is home to an extraordinary variety of climatic regions,
ranging from tropical in the south to temperate and alpine in the
Himalayan north, where elevated regions receive sustained winter
snowfall. The nation's climate is strongly influenced by the
Himalayas and the Thar Desert.
The Himalayas, along with the Hindu Kush
mountains in Pakistan
, prevent cold Central Asian katabatic winds from
blowing in, keeping the bulk of the Indian subcontinent warmer than
most locations at similar latitudes.
Simultaneously, the Thar Desert plays a role in attracting
moisture-laden southwest summer monsoon winds that, between June
and October, provide the majority of India's rainfall. Four major
climatic groupings predominate, into which fall seven climatic
zones that, as designated by experts, are defined on the basis of
such traits as temperature and precipitation. Groupings are
assigned codes (see chart) according to the Köppen climate
classification system.
Tropical wet
A tropical rainy climate covers regions experiencing persistent
warm or high temperatures, which normally do not fall below . India
hosts two climatic subtypes that fall under this group.
The most
humid is the tropical wet climate (also known as a tropical monsoon climate) that
covers a strip of southwestern lowlands abutting the Malabar Coast, the Western Ghats, and southern Assam
.
India's
two island territories, Lakshadweep
and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands
, are also subject to this climate.
Characterised by moderate to high year-round temperatures, even in
the foothills, its rainfall is seasonal but heavy—typically above
per year. Most rainfall occurs between May and November; this is
adequate for the maintenance of lush forests and other vegetation
throughout the remainder of the year. December to March are the
driest months, when days with precipitation are rare. The heavy
monsoon rains are responsible for the extremely biodiverse tropical
wet forests of these regions.
In India, a
tropical wet and
dry climate is more common. Noticeably drier than areas with a
tropical monsoon climate, it prevails over most of inland
peninsular India except for a semi
arid rain
shadow east of the Western Ghats. Winter and early summer are long,
dry periods with temperatures averaging above . Summer is
exceptionally hot; temperatures in low-lying areas may exceed
during May, leading to heat waves that can each kill hundreds of
Indians. The rainy season lasts from June to September; annual
rainfall averages between 750–1500 millimetres (30–59 in)
across the region. Once the dry northeast monsoon begins in
September, most precipitation in India falls on Tamil Nadu, leaving
other states comparatively dry.
Tropical dry
A tropical
arid and
semi-arid climate dominates regions where the rate
of moisture loss through
evapotranspiration exceeds that from
precipitation; it is subdivided into three climatic subtypes.
The
first, a tropical semi-arid steppe
climate, predominates over a long stretch of land south of Tropic
of Cancer and east of the Western Ghats and the Cardamom
Hills
. The region, which includes Karnataka
, inland Tamil Nadu
, western Andhra Pradesh
, and central Maharashtra
, gets between 400–750 millimetres
(16–30 in) annually. It is drought-prone, as it tends
to have less reliable rainfall due to sporadic lateness or failure
of the southwest monsoon. North of the
Krishna River, the summer monsoon is
responsible for most rainfall; to the south, significant
post-monsoon rainfall also occurs in October and November. In
December, the coldest month, temperatures still average around .
The months between March to May are hot and dry; mean monthly
temperatures hover around 32 °C, with precipitation. Hence, without
artificial irrigation, this region is not suitable for permanent
agriculture.
Most of
western Rajasthan
experiences an arid
climatic regime. Cloudbursts
are responsible for virtually all of the region's annual
precipitation, which totals less than . Such bursts happen when
monsoon winds sweep into the region during July, August, and
September. Such rainfall is highly erratic; regions experiencing
rainfall one year may not see precipitation for the next couple of
years or so. Atmospheric moisture is largely prevented from
precipitating due to continuous
downdrafts and other factors. The summer
months of May and June are exceptionally hot; mean monthly
temperatures in the region hover around , with daily maxima
occasionally topping . During winters, temperatures in some areas
can drop below freezing due to waves of cold air from Central Asia.
There is a large diurnal range of about 14 °C (25 °F) during
summer; this widens by several degrees during winter.
East of
the Thar Desert, the region running from Punjab
and Haryana
to Kathiawar experiences a
tropical and sub-tropical steppe
climate. The zone, a transitional climatic region separating
tropical desert from humid sub-tropical savanna and forests,
experiences temperatures that are less extreme than those of the
desert. Average annual rainfall is 30–65 centimetres
(12–26 in), but is very unreliable; as in much of the rest of
India, the southwest monsoon accounts for most precipitation. Daily
summer temperature maxima rise to around . The resulting natural
vegetation typically comprises short, coarse grasses.
Subtropical humid
Most of Northeast India and much of North India are subject to a
humid subtropical climate.
Though they experience hot summers, temperatures during the coldest
months may fall as low as . Due to ample monsoon rains, India has
only one subtype of this climate,
Cfa (under the Köppen
system). In most of this region, there is very little precipitation
during the winter, owing to powerful anticyclonic and katabatic
(downward-flowing) winds from Central Asia.
Humid subtropical regions are subject to pronounced dry winters.
Winter rainfall—and occasionally snowfall—is associated with large
storm systems such as "Nor'westers" and "
Western disturbances"; the latter are
steered by
westerlies towards the
Himalayas. Most summer rainfall occurs during powerful
thunderstorms associated with the southwest summer monsoon;
occasional
tropical cyclones also
contribute. Annual rainfall ranges from less than in the west to
over in parts of the northeast. As most of this region is far from
the ocean, the wide temperature swings more characteristic of a
continental climate predominate;
the swings are wider than in those in tropical wet regions, ranging
from in north-central India to in the east.
Montane
India's northernmost areas are subject to a montane, or alpine,
climate. In the Himalayas, the rate at which an air mass's
temperature falls per kilometre (3,281 ft) of altitude gained
(the
adiabatic lapse rate) is
5.1 °C/km. In terms of
environmental lapse rate, ambient
temperatures fall by 0.6 °C (1.1 °F) for every rise in
altitude. Thus, climates ranging from nearly tropical in the
foothills to tundra above the
snow line
can coexist within several dozen miles of each other. Sharp
temperature contrasts between sunny and shady slopes, high diurnal
temperature variability, temperature inversions, and
altitude-dependent variability in rainfall are also common. The
northern side of the western Himalayas, also known as the
trans-Himalayan belt, is a region of barren,
arid, frigid, and wind-blown wastelands. Most
precipitation occurs as snowfall during the late winter and spring
months.
Areas south of the Himalayas are largely protected from cold winter
winds coming in from the Asian interior. The leeward side (northern
face) of the mountains receives less rain while the southern
slopes, well-exposed to the monsoon, get heavy rainfall. Areas
situated at elevations of 1,070–2,290 metres (3,510–7,510 ft)
receive the heaviest rainfall, which decreases rapidly at
elevations above . The Himalayas experience their heaviest snowfall
between December and February and at elevations above . Snowfall
increases with elevation by up to several dozen millimetres per
100 metre (~2 in; 330 ft) increase. Elevations above
never experience rain; all precipitation falls as snow.
Seasons
The
India Meteorological
Department (IMD) designates four official seasons:
- Winter, occurring between January and March.
The year's coldest months are December and January, when
temperatures average around in the northwest; temperatures rise as
one proceeds towards the equator, peaking around in mainland
India's southeast.
- Summer or pre-monsoon season,
lasting from March to June (April to July in northwestern India).
In western and southern regions, the hottest month is April; for
northern regions, May is the hottest month. Temperatures average
around in most of the interior.
- Monsoon or rainy season,
lasting from June to September. The season is dominated by the
humid southwest summer monsoon, which slowly sweeps across the
country beginning in late May or early June. Monsoon rains begin to
recede from North India at the beginning of October.
- Post-monsoon season, lasting from October to
December. South India typically receives more precipitation.
Monsoon rains begin to recede from North India at the beginning of
October. In northwestern India, October and November are usually
cloudless. Parts of the country experience the dry northeast
monsoon.
The Himalayan states, being more temperate, experience an
additional two seasons: autumn and spring. Traditionally, Indians
note six seasons, each about two months long. These are the spring
( ), summer (
grīṣma), monsoon season (
varṣā),
early autumn (
śarada), late autumn (
hemanta), and
winter (
śiśira). These are based on the astronomical
division of the twelve months into six parts. The ancient
Hindu calendar also reflects these seasons in
its arrangement of months.
Winter
Once the monsoons subside, average temperatures gradually fall
across India. As the Sun's vertical rays move south of the equator,
most of the country experiences moderately cool weather;
temperatures change by about per degree of latitude. December and
January are the coldest months, with mean temperatures of in Indian
Himalayas. Mean temperatures are higher in the east and south,
where they reach .
In northwestern India, virtually cloudless conditions prevail in
October and November, resulting in wide diurnal temperature swings;
as in much of the Deccan Plateau, they range between . However,
from March to May, "western disturbances" bring heavy bursts of
rain and snow.
These extra-tropical low-pressure systems originate in the
eastern Mediterranean Sea
. They are carried towards India by the
subtropical
westerlies, which are the
prevailing winds blowing at North
India's range of latitude. Once their passage is hindered by the
Himalayas, they are unable to proceed further, and they release
significant precipitation over the southern Himalayas.
The three Himalayan
states (Jammu and Kashmir in the extreme north, Himachal
Pradesh
, and Uttarakhand
) experience heavy snowfall;
in Jammu and Kashmir, blizzards occur
regularly, disrupting travel and other activities.
The rest of
North India, including the
Indo-Gangetic Plain, almost
never receives snow. However, in the plains, temperatures
occasionally fall below freezing, though never for more one or two
days. Winter highs in Delhi range from to . Nighttime temperatures
average .
In the Punjab
plains, lows
can fall below freezing, dropping to around in Amritsar
. Frost sometimes occurs, but the hallmark of
the season is the notorious
fog, which
frequently disrupts daily life; fog grows thick enough to hinder
visibility and disrupt air travel 15–20 days annually. Eastern
India's climate is much milder, experiencing moderately warm days
and cool nights.
Highs range from in Patna
to in
Kolkata
(Calcutta); lows average from in Patna to in
Kolkata. Frigid winds from the Himalayas can depress
temperatures near the Brahmaputra River
. The two Himalayan states in the east,
Sikkim
and Arunachal
Pradesh
, receive substantial snowfall. The extreme north of
West
Bengal
, centred around Darjeeling
, also experiences snowfall, but only
rarely.
In
South India, particularly the hinterland
of Maharashtra, Madhya
Pradesh
, parts of Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh, somewhat
cooler weather prevails. Minimum temperatures in western Maharashtra,
Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh
hover around ; in the southern Deccan Plateau, they
reach . Coastal areas, especially those near the
Coromandel Coast, and low-elevation
interior tracts are warm, with daily high temperatures of and lows
of around . The Western Ghats, including the
Nilgiri Range, are exceptional; there,
lows can fall below freezing. This compares with a range of on the
Malabar Coast; there, as is the case for other coastal areas, the
Indian Ocean exerts a strong moderating influence on weather.
Summer
Summer in northwestern India lasts from April to July, and in the
rest of the country from March to June. The temperatures in the
north rise as the vertical rays of the Sun reach the Tropic of
Cancer. The hottest month for the western and southern regions of
the country is April; for most of North India, it is May.
Temperatures of and higher have been recorded in parts of India
during this season. In cooler regions of North India, immense
pre-monsoon
squall-line thunderstorms, known
locally as "Nor'westers", commonly drop large hailstones. Near the
coast the temperature hovers around , and the proximity of the sea
increases the level of humidity. In southern India, the
temperatures are higher on the east coast by a few degrees compared
to the west coast.
By May, most of the Indian interior experiences mean temperatures
over , while maximum temperatures often exceed . In the hot months
of April and May, western disturbances, with their cooling
influence, may still arrive, but rapidly diminish in frequency as
summer progresses. Notably, a higher frequency of such disturbances
in April correlates with a delayed monsoon onset (thus extending
summer) in northwest India. In eastern India, monsoon onset dates
have been steadily advancing over the past several decades,
resulting in shorter summers there.
Altitude
affects the temperature to a large extent, with higher parts of the
Deccan
Plateau
and other areas being relatively cooler.
Hill stations, such as Ootacamund
("Ooty") in the Western Ghats and Kalimpong
in the eastern Himalayas, with average maximum
temperatures of around , offer some respite from the heat.
At lower elevations, in parts of northern and western India, a
strong, hot, and dry wind known as the
Loo blows in from the west during the daytime;
with very high temperatures, in some cases up to around ; it can
cause fatal cases of
sunstroke.
Tornadoes may also occur, concentrated in a
corridor stretching from northeastern India towards Pakistan. They
are rare, however; only several dozen have been reported since
1835.
Monsoon
Onset dates and prevailing wind currents of the southwest
summer and northeast winter monsoons.
|
Regional variation in rainfall across India.
The monsoon season delivers four-fifths of the country's
precipitation.
|
The southwest summer monsoon, a four-month period when massive
convective thunderstorms dominate India's weather, is Earth's most
productive wet season. A product of southeast
trade winds originating from a high-pressure mass
centered over the southern Indian Ocean, the monsoonal torrents
supply over 80% of India's annual rainfall. Attracted by a
low-pressure region centered over South Asia, the mass spawns
surface winds that ferry humid air into India from the southwest.
These inflows ultimately result from a northward shift of the local
jet stream, which itself results from rising summer temperatures
over
Tibet and the Indian subcontinent. The
void left by the jet stream, which switches from a route just south
of the Himalayas to one tracking north of Tibet, then attracts
warm, humid air.
The main factor behind this shift is the high summer temperature
difference between Central Asia and the Indian Ocean. This is
accompanied by a seasonal excursion of the normally equatorial
intertropical convergence
zone (ITCZ), a low-pressure belt of highly unstable weather,
northward towards India.
This system intensified to its present
strength as a result of the Tibetan Plateau
's uplift, which accompanied
the Eocene–Oligocene
transition event, a major episode of global cooling and aridification which occurred
34–49 Ma.
The
southwest monsoon arrives in two branches: the Bay of Bengal
branch and the Arabian Sea
branch. The latter extends toward a
low-pressure area over the Thar Desert and is roughly three times
stronger than the Bay of Bengal branch.
The monsoon typically
breaks over Indian territory by around 25 May, when it lashes the
Andaman and
Nicobar Islands
in the Bay of Bengal. It strikes the Indian
mainland around 1 June near the
Malabar
Coast of Kerala.
By 9 June, it reaches Mumbai
; it appears
over Delhi
by 29
June. The Bay of Bengal branch, which initially
tracks the Coromandal Coast northeast from Cape Comorin
to Orissa
, swerves to
the northwest towards the Indo-Gangetic Plain. The Arabian
Sea branch moves northeast towards the Himalayas. By the first week
of July, the entire country experiences monsoon rain; on average,
South India receives more rainfall than North India. However,
Northeast India receives the most
precipitation. Monsoon clouds begin retreating from North India by
the end of August; it withdraws from Mumbai by 5 October. As India
further cools during September, the southwest monsoon weakens. By
the end of November, it has left the country.
Monsoon rains impact the health of the
Indian economy; as
Indian agriculture employs 600 million
people and composes 20% of the national
GDP, good monsoons correlate with a
booming economy. Weak or failed monsoons (droughts) result in
widespread agricultural losses and substantially hinder overall
economic growth. The rains reduce temperatures and replenish
groundwater tables, rivers, and lakes.
Post-monsoon
During the post-monsoon months of October to December, a different
monsoon cycle, the northeast (or "retreating") monsoon, brings dry,
cool, and dense Central Asian air masses to large parts of India.
Winds spill across the Himalayas and flow to the southwest across
the country, resulting in clear, sunny skies. Though the
India Meteorological
Department (IMD) and other sources refers to this period as a
fourth ("post-monsoon") season, other sources designate only three
seasons. Depending on location, this period lasts from October to
November, after the southwest monsoon has peaked. Less and less
precipitation falls, and vegetation begins to dry out. In most
parts of India, this period marks the transition from wet to dry
seasonal conditions. Average daily maximum temperatures range
between .
The northeast monsoon, which begins in September, lasts through the
post-monsoon seasons, and only ends in March, carries winds that
have already lost their moisture while crossing central Asia and
the vast
rain shadow region lying north
of the Himalayas. They cross India diagonally from northeast to
southwest.
However, the large indentation made by the
Bay of Bengal into India's eastern coast means that the flows are
humidified before reaching Cape Comorin
and rest of Tamil Nadu, meaning that the state, and
also some parts of Kerala, experience significant precipitation in
the post-monsoon and winter periods. However, parts of West
Bengal, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh,
Karnataka and North-East India also
receive minor precipitation from the northeast monsoon.
Statistics
Shown below are temperature and precipitation data for selected
Indian cities; these represent the full variety of major Indian
climate types. Figures have been grouped by the four-season
classification scheme used by the IMD; year-round averages and
totals are also displayed.
Temperature
Average temperatures in various Indian cities
(°C)
| — |
Winter (Jan – Feb) |
Summer (Mar – May) |
Monsoon (Jun – Sep) |
Post-monsoon (Oct – Dec) |
Year-round |
| City |
Min |
Avg |
Max |
Min |
Avg |
Max |
Min |
Avg |
Max |
Min |
Avg |
Max |
Avg |
Port
Blair |
23 |
26 |
28 |
25 |
27 |
29 |
25 |
27 |
27 |
25 |
26 |
28 |
27 |
Thiruvananthapuram |
23 |
26 |
29 |
24 |
27 |
30 |
28 |
26 |
24 |
29 |
26 |
23 |
26 |
Bangalore |
7 |
12 |
18 |
13 |
18 |
23 |
15 |
19 |
23 |
8 |
13 |
18 |
17 |
Nagpur |
14 |
21 |
28 |
24 |
32 |
40 |
24 |
27 |
30 |
16 |
22 |
28 |
26 |
Bhopal |
13 |
18 |
24 |
23 |
30 |
36 |
23 |
26 |
28 |
16 |
22 |
26 |
25 |
Guwahati |
11 |
17 |
24 |
19 |
25 |
31 |
25 |
28 |
32 |
17 |
22 |
27 |
24 |
Lucknow |
10 |
15 |
21 |
23 |
30 |
35 |
24 |
29 |
33 |
15 |
20 |
25 |
25 |
Jaisalmer |
7 |
14 |
23 |
24 |
33 |
40 |
23 |
29 |
35 |
12 |
19 |
27 |
22 |
Dehradun |
4 |
12 |
20 |
14 |
23 |
32 |
22 |
26 |
30 |
7 |
15 |
23 |
18 |
Amritsar |
4 |
10 |
18 |
13 |
25 |
34 |
25 |
28 |
32 |
10 |
16 |
24 |
21 |
Shimla |
1 |
5 |
9 |
10 |
14 |
18 |
15 |
18 |
20 |
7 |
10 |
13 |
13 |
Srinagar |
−2 |
4 |
6 |
7 |
14 |
19 |
16 |
22 |
30 |
1 |
8 |
16 |
13 |
Leh |
−13 |
−6 |
0 |
−1 |
6 |
12 |
10 |
16 |
24 |
−7 |
0 |
7 |
6 |
|
|
Precipitation
Average precipitation in various Indian
cities (mm)
| — |
Winter (Jan – Feb) |
Summer (Mar – May) |
Monsoon (Jun – Sep) |
Post-monsoon (Oct – Dec) |
Year-round |
| City |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
Total |
Port
Blair |
40 |
20 |
10 |
60 |
360 |
480 |
400 |
400 |
460 |
290 |
220 |
150 |
2,890 |
Thiruvananthapuram |
26 |
21 |
33 |
125 |
202 |
306 |
175 |
152 |
179 |
223 |
206 |
65 |
1,713 |
Bangalore |
31 |
20 |
61 |
110 |
150 |
212 |
249 |
279 |
315 |
291 |
210 |
140 |
1,962 |
Nagpur |
16 |
22 |
15 |
8 |
18 |
168 |
290 |
291 |
157 |
73 |
17 |
19 |
1,094 |
Bhopal |
4 |
3 |
1 |
3 |
11 |
136 |
279 |
360 |
185 |
52 |
21 |
7 |
1,043 |
Guwahati |
8 |
21 |
47 |
181 |
226 |
309 |
377 |
227 |
199 |
92 |
25 |
10 |
1,722 |
Lucknow |
20 |
18 |
8 |
8 |
20 |
114 |
305 |
292 |
188 |
33 |
5 |
8 |
1,019 |
Jaisalmer |
– |
– |
3 |
– |
7 |
10 |
90 |
88 |
15 |
– |
6 |
– |
219 |
Dehradun |
47 |
55 |
52 |
21 |
54 |
230 |
631 |
627 |
261 |
32 |
11 |
3 |
2,024 |
Amritsar |
24 |
33 |
48 |
30 |
45 |
27 |
231 |
187 |
79 |
18 |
6 |
18 |
746 |
Shimla |
60 |
60 |
60 |
50 |
60 |
170 |
420 |
430 |
160 |
30 |
10 |
20 |
1,530 |
Srinagar |
74 |
71 |
91 |
94 |
61 |
36 |
58 |
61 |
38 |
31 |
10 |
33 |
658 |
Leh |
12 |
9 |
12 |
6 |
7 |
4 |
16 |
20 |
12 |
7 |
3 |
8 |
116 |
|
|
Disasters
Disaster-prone regions in India.
|
Map showing winds zones, shaded by distribution of average
speeds of prevailing winds.
|
Climate-related natural disasters cause massive losses of Indian
life and property. Droughts, flash floods, cyclones, avalanches,
landslides brought on by torrential rains, and snowstorms pose the
greatest threats. Other dangers include frequent summer dust
storms, which usually track from north to south; they cause
extensive property damage in North India and deposit large amounts
of dust from
arid regions. Hail is also common
in parts of India, causing severe damage to standing crops such as
rice and wheat.
Floods and landslides
In the Lower Himalaya, landslides are common. The young age of the
region's hills result in
labile rock
formations, which are susceptible to slippages. Rising population
and development pressures, particularly from logging and tourism,
cause deforestation. The result, denuded hillsides, exacerbates the
severity of landslides, since tree cover impedes the downhill flow
of water. Parts of the Western Ghats also suffer from low-intensity
landslides. Avalanches occur in Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, and
Sikkim.
Floods are the most common natural disaster in India.
The heavy southwest
monsoon rains cause the Brahmaputra
and other rivers to distend their banks, often
flooding surrounding areas. Though they provide rice paddy
farmers with a largely dependable source of natural irrigation and
fertilisation, the floods can kill thousands and displace millions.
Excess, erratic, or untimely monsoon rainfall may also wash away or
otherwise ruin crops. Almost all of India is flood-prone, and
extreme precipitation events, such as flash floods and torrential
rains, have become increasingly common in central India over the
past several decades, coinciding with rising temperatures. Mean
annual precipitation totals have remained steady due to the
declining frequency of weather systems that generate moderate
amounts of rain.
Cyclones
Tropical cyclones, which are severe
storms spun off from the
Intertropical Convergence
Zone, may affect thousands of Indians living in coastal
regions.
Tropical
cyclogenesis is particularly common in the northern reaches of
the Indian
Ocean
in and around the Bay of Bengal. Cyclones
bring with them heavy rains,
storm
surges, and winds that often cut affected areas off from relief
and supplies. In the North Indian Ocean Basin, the cyclone season
runs from April to December, with peak activity between May and
November. Each year, an average of eight storms with sustained wind
speeds greater than 63
km/h
(39
mph) form; of these, two
strengthen into true tropical cyclones, which have sustained gusts
greater than . On average, a major (
Category 3 or higher) cyclone
develops every other year.
During
summer, the Bay of
Bengal
is subject to intense heating, giving rise to humid
and unstable air masses that morph into cyclones.
The
1737 Calcutta cyclone, the
1970 Bhola cyclone, and the
1991 Bangladesh cyclone rank
among the most powerful
cyclones to strike India, devastating the coasts of eastern
India and neighboring Bangladesh
. Widespread death and property destruction
are reported every year in the exposed coastal states of West
Bengal, Orissa
, Andhra
Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu. India's western coast, bordering the more
placid Arabian Sea, experiences cyclones only rarely; these mainly
strike Gujarat
and, less frequently, Kerala
.
Cyclone 05B, a supercyclone that
struck Orissa on 29 October 1999, was the deadliest in more than a
quarter-century. With peak winds of , it was the equivalent of a
Category 5 hurricane.
Almost two million people were left homeless; another 20 million
people lives were disrupted by the cyclone. Officially, 9,803
people died from the storm; unofficial estimates place the death
toll at over 10,000.
Droughts
Indian agriculture is heavily dependent on the monsoon as a source
of water. In some parts of India, the failure of the monsoons
result in water shortages, resulting in below-average crop yields.
This is particularly true of major drought-prone regions such as
southern and eastern Maharashtra, northern Karnataka, Andhra
Pradesh, Orissa, Gujarat, and Rajasthan. In the past, droughts have
periodically led to
major Indian
famines. These include the
Bengal famine of 1770, in which up to
one third of the population in affected areas died; the 1876–1877
famine, in which over five million people died; the 1899 famine, in
which over 4.5 million died; and the
Bengal famine of 1943, in which over
five million died from starvation and famine-related
illnesses.
All such episodes of severe drought correlate with
El Niño-Southern
Oscillation (ENSO) events. El Niño-related droughts have also
been implicated in periodic declines in Indian agricultural output.
Nevertheless, ENSO events that have coincided with abnormally high
sea surfaces temperatures in the Indian Ocean—in one instance
during 1997 and 1998 by up to 3 °C (5 °F)—have resulted
in increased oceanic evaporation, resulting in unusually wet
weather across India. Such anomalies have occurred during a
sustained warm spell that began in the 1990s. A contrasting
phenomenon is that, instead of the usual high pressure air mass
over the southern Indian Ocean, an ENSO-related oceanic low
pressure convergence center forms; it then continually pulls dry
air from Central Asia, desiccating India during what should have
been the humid summer monsoon season. This reversed air flow causes
India's droughts.
The extent that an ENSO event raises
sea surface temperatures in
the central Pacific
Ocean
influences the degree of drought.
Extremes

Alwar, on the fringes of the Thar
Desert, registered a temperature of , India's highest.
India's
lowest recorded temperature was in Dras
, Ladakh,
in eastern Jammu and Kashmir; however, the reading was taken with
non-standard equipment. Readings as low as have been taken in
Leh
, further south in Ladakh. However, temperatures
on the Indian-controlled Siachen Glacier
near Bilafond
La
( ) and Sia
La
( ) have fallen below , while blizzards bring wind
speeds in excess of , or hurricane-force
winds ranking at 12 (the maximum) on the Beaufort scale. These conditions, not
hostile actions, caused more than 97% of the roughly 15,000
casualties suffered by India and Pakistan during
conflict in the region.
The highest reliable
temperature reading was in Alwar
, Rajasthan
in 1955. The
India Meteorological
Department (IMD) doubts the validity of readings in Orissa from
2005.
The
average annual precipitation of in the village of Mawsynram
, in the hilly northeastern state of Meghalaya, is
the highest recorded in Asia, and possibly on
Earth. The village, which sits at an elevation of , benefits
from its proximity to both the Himalayas and the Bay of Bengal.
However,
since the town of Cherrapunji
, to the east, is the nearest town to host a
meteorological office (none has ever existed in Mawsynram), it is
officially credited as being the world's wettest place. In
recent years, the Cherrapunji-Mawsynram region has averaged between
and of rain annually, though Cherrapunji has had at least one
period of daily rainfall that lasted almost two years. India's
highest recorded one-day rainfall total occurred on 26 July 2005,
when Mumbai received more than ; the massive flooding that resulted
killed over 900 people.
Remote
regions of Jammu and Kashmir, such as Baramulla district
in the east and the Pir Panjal Range
in the southeast, experience exceptionally heavy
snowfall. Kashmir's highest recorded monthly snowfall
occurred in February 1967, when fell in Gulmarg
, though the IMD has recorded snowdrifts up to in
several Kashmiri districts. In February 2005, more than 200
people died when, in four days, a western disturbance brought up to
of snowfall to parts of the state.
Global warming

Lakshadweep, comprising tiny low-lying
islands, are at risk of being inundated by sea level rises
associated with global warming.
Current sea level rise,
increased cyclonic activity, increased ambient temperatures, and
increasingly fickle precipitation patterns are
effects of global warming that
have impacted or are projected to impact India.
Thousands of people
have been deplaced by ongoing sea level rises that have submerged
low-lying islands in the Sundarbans
. Temperature rises on the Tibetan Plateau are
causing Himalayan
glaciers to retreat, threatening the flow rate of the Ganges, Brahmaputra,
Yamuna
, and other
major rivers; the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of farmers
depend on these rivers. A 2007 World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
report states that the Indus River
may run dry for the same reason.
Severe landslides and floods are projected to become increasingly
common in such states as Assam. Ecological disasters, such as a
1998
coral bleaching event that
killed off more than 70% of
corals in the reef
ecosystems off Lakshadweep and the Andamans, and was brought on by
elevated ocean temperatures tied to global warming, are also
projected to become increasingly common.
The
Indira Gandhi
Institute of Development Research has reported that, if the
predictions relating to global warming made by the
Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change come to fruition, climate-related
factors could cause India's GDP to decline by up to 9%.
Contributing to this would be shifting growing seasons for major
crops such as rice, production of which could fall by 40%. Around
seven million people are projected to be displaced due to, among
other factors, submersion of parts of Mumbai and Chennai, if global
temperatures were to rise by a mere 2 °C (3.6 °F). Such shifts are
not new. Earlier in the
Holocene epoch (4,800–6,300 years ago),
parts of what is now the Thar Desert were wet enough to support
perennial lakes; researchers have proposed that this was due to
much higher winter precipitation, which coincided with stronger
monsoons. Kashmir's erstwhile subtropical climate dramatically
cooled 2.6–3.7 Ma and experienced prolonged cold spells
starting 600,000 years ago.
Atmospheric pollution

Clouds of thick haze and smoke form
along the Ganges River Basin.
Thick haze and smoke, originating from burning biomass in
northwestern India and air pollution from large industrial cities
in northern India, often concentrate inside the
Ganges Basin.
Prevailing westerlies carry aerosols
along the southern margins of the steep-faced Tibetan Plateau to
eastern India and the Bay of Bengal
. Dust and
black
carbon, which are blown towards higher altitudes by winds at
the southern margins of the Himalayas, can absorb shortwave
radiation and heat the air over the Tibetan Plateau. The net
atmospheric heating due to aerosol absorption causes the air to
warm and
convect upwards, increasing the
concentration of moisture in the mid-
troposphere and providing positive feedback that
stimulates further heating of aerosols.
Notes
α.
The IMD-designated post-monsoon season coincides with the northeast
monsoon, the effects of which are significant only in some parts of
India.
References
Citations
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Further reading
External links
- General overview
- Maps, imagery, and statistics
- Forecasts