IMD revises its forecast for the onset of monsoon over Kerala to ‘around June 4’


IMD Revises Monsoon Onset Forecast for Kerala to 'Around June 4'


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Normal onset date (Kerala) June 1
2026 original IMD forecast May 26 (issued May 15, 2026)
Model error window ±4 days (upper bound: May 30)
Revised forecast "Around June 4, 2026"
Forecast model Custom IMD statistical model (operational since 2005)
Implementing agency India Meteorological Department (IMD), under Ministry of Earth Sciences
No. of designated onset stations 14 (Kerala + Lakshadweep + Mangalore)
Rainfall threshold for onset ≥2.5 mm at ≥60% stations for 2 consecutive days
Wind criterion Westerlies up to 600 hPa; box: Eq–10°N, 55°E–80°E
OLR criterion <200 W/m²; box: 5°N–10°N, 70°E–75°E
Earliest ever onset May 11 (1918)
Latest ever onset June 18 (1972)
Previous forecast miss 2015 (forecast: May 30; actual: June 5)

[S1][S2]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Agricultural / Economic

Scientific / Technological

Environmental

Administrative / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Normal date of southwest monsoon onset over Kerala: June 1. [S1]
  2. IMD's operational monsoon onset forecast model has been in use since 2005. [S1]
  3. The model's only previous forecast failure before 2026 was in 2015 (predicted May 30; actual onset June 5). [S1]
  4. Onset declared only after May 10 — onset cannot be declared before this date by IMD convention. [S2]
  5. Onset requires ≥60% of 14 designated stations to record ≥2.5 mm rain for two consecutive days. [S2]
  6. Additional onset criteria: westerly wind depth up to 600 hPa; OLR below 200 W/m². [S2]
  7. Implementing ministry for IMD: Ministry of Earth Sciences (not Ministry of Agriculture; not Ministry of Environment). [S1]
  8. In 2026, IMD's original onset forecast was May 26 — revised to around June 4 after the monsoon missed even the upper bound of the ±4-day error window. [S1]
  9. The northern limit of monsoon (NLM) is tracked using a cloud-band line; as of June 2, 2026, it lay at 10°N/60°E — short of the Kerala coast. [S1]
  10. Upper-air cyclonic circulation (not a depression or low-pressure system) was cited as the mechanism aiding final advance toward Kerala in June 2026. [S1]
  11. IMD's 2026 forecast overshoots the upper bound (May 30) of its own model error — making it technically an out-of-window miss. [S1]
  12. The 14 designated onset stations include Minicoy, Thiruvananthapuram, Kochi, Kozhikode, Kannur, and Mangalore (Lakshadweep + Kerala + coastal Karnataka). [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: GS-I (Physical Geography), GS-III (Science & Technology, Agriculture)

Syllabus Headings: - GS-I: Distribution of key natural resources; Important Geophysical phenomena such as cyclones, earthquakes, tsunamis, monsoons. - GS-III: Science and Technology — developments and their applications; Agriculture — issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices.

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Examine the criteria used by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) for declaring the onset of the southwest monsoon over Kerala. What are the implications of a delayed monsoon onset for India's agricultural sector and water resource management?" (GS-III) 2. "The IMD's operational monsoon onset model has been accurate for most of the period 2005–2025. Discuss the scientific and socio-economic significance of accurate monsoon onset forecasting in India." (GS-I/GS-III) 3. "In the context of changing climate patterns in the Arabian Sea, analyse the challenges faced by the IMD in predicting the onset of the southwest monsoon with precision." (GS-I)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Southwest Monsoon — Mechanism & Origin Foundational geography; differential heating, ITCZ, jet streams driving monsoon onset
El Niño & La Niña (ENSO) Primary large-scale driver of inter-annual monsoon variability; IMD models factor SST anomalies
Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) Positive IOD correlated with above-normal monsoon; studied alongside ENSO for seasonal outlooks
Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) Crop insurance scheme linked to monsoon onset and rainfall deficits
National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) — Drought Management Delayed onset triggers drought contingency plans; link to DM Act 2005
Ministry of Earth Sciences & its agencies IMD, INCOIS, NCESS — parent ministry context for MCQ traps
Western Disturbances vs. Southwest Monsoon Contrasting winter vs. summer precipitation systems; common confusion in Prelims
OLR (Outgoing Longwave Radiation) in Climate Science Objective metric used in monsoon onset declaration; also used in ITCZ tracking

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: IMD is under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, NOT the Ministry of Agriculture or Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change. This is a classic MCQ trap.
  2. Normal onset date: The normal onset date for Kerala is June 1, not May 31 or June 5. Do not confuse "normal" with "earliest" (May 11, 1918) or "latest" (June 18, 1972).
  3. Onset criteria thresholds: The rainfall threshold is ≥2.5 mm (not 2 mm or 5 mm), and the station coverage is ≥60% of 14 designated stations (not "majority" or "all"). Many aspirants conflate this with the IMD's standard rain day definition (2.5 mm) and assume that is the only criterion, missing the wind/OLR requirements.
  4. 2015 vs. 2026 comparison: In 2015 the actual onset (June 5) was later than the forecast (May 30); in 2026 the revised forecast itself was pushed to June 4. These are distinct events — avoid merging them in answers.
  5. "Onset over Kerala" ≠ "Monsoon enters India": The monsoon also enters India from the northeast (Bay of Bengal branch, hitting Andaman & Nicobar around late May). The Kerala onset refers specifically to the Arabian Sea branch reaching the mainland.

11. Sources