Monsoon sets in over Kerala three days late amid concerns over El Niño impact
UPSC Study Note: Southwest Monsoon Onset over Kerala & El Niño Impact (2026)
1. At a Glance
- The Southwest (SW) Monsoon is India's primary rainfall system (June–September), delivering ~75% of the country's annual rainfall and sustaining ~52% of net sown area under rainfed agriculture.
- The onset over Kerala is the meteorologically designated start of the monsoon season; its date, forecast accuracy, and spatial advance are tracked as national economic indicators.
- El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) modulates monsoon strength — El Niño phases historically correlate with below-normal Indian Summer Monsoon Rainfall (ISMR). [S1][S3][S5]
- For UPSC: this topic sits at the intersection of GS-I (Geography/Climate), GS-III (Agriculture/Food Security), and GS-II (Governance/Disaster Management).
2. Why in the News
- The SW Monsoon set in over Kerala on 4 June 2026 — 3 days later than the normal onset date of 1 June and 5 days beyond IMD's own forecast (forecast: 26 May ± 4 days; upper bound was 30 May). [S2][S4]
- The delayed onset coincides with a strengthening El Niño: WMO now assigns ~80% probability of El Niño conditions persisting through July–August 2026 — the core kharif sowing months. [S5]
- IMD's 2026 Long-Range Forecast (LRF) projects the full season at below-normal: 90% of the Long Period Average (LPA). [S6]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year/Period | Milestone |
|---|---|
| Pre-1950s | Monsoon onset date over Kerala tracked informally; no standardised criteria |
| 1 June | Established as normal onset date for Kerala (SD ≈ 7 days) [S1] |
| 1950–present | IMD maintains historical records; since 1950, 16 El Niño years identified, of which 7 produced below-normal ISMR [S3] |
| 2003 | IMD formalises onset criteria: sustained rainfall over Kerala stations, OLR thresholds, wind field over Bay of Bengal & Arabian Sea, convective cloudiness |
| 2015 | Major El Niño year — India's maize output fell 4%, rice 1% [S5] |
| 2021–2024 | IMD claims 100% accuracy in all-India SW monsoon seasonal rainfall forecast [S1] |
| 15 May 2026 | IMD releases onset forecast: Kerala onset 26 May 2026 ± 4 days [S2] |
| 2 June 2026 | IMD updated advisory: onset likely around 4 June [S4] |
| 4 June 2026 | Actual onset declared over Kerala [S4] |
4. Core Static Facts
Monsoon Mechanics - Season: June–September (JJAS); ~4 months - Normal Kerala onset date: 1 June (Standard Deviation: ~7 days) [S1] - Onset criteria (IMD formal): - ≥60% of 14 designated stations report ≥2.5 mm rainfall for 2 consecutive days - Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR) < 200 W/m² over the region - Lower tropospheric westerlies established over the area - Convective cloudiness over southeast Arabian Sea - Long Period Average (LPA): Benchmark for seasonal rainfall (1971–2020 series = 87 cm) [S6] - Below-normal: < 96% of LPA; Normal: 96–104%; Above-normal: > 104% - 2026 seasonal forecast: 90% of LPA (below-normal) [S6]
El Niño / ENSO - El Niño: Anomalous warming of central/eastern Pacific SSTs; suppresses Indian monsoon via weakened pressure gradient - WMO El Niño probability for Jul–Aug 2026: ~80% [S5] - Historical correlation: 16 El Niño events since 1950; 7 produced below-normal ISMR (~44% co-occurrence) [S3] - La Niña: Converse effect; tends to enhance Indian monsoon
Implementing Body - India Meteorological Department (IMD) — under Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) - WMO provides global ENSO monitoring and outlooks
Agriculture Link - >50% of cropped area in India is rainfed [Article] - Monsoon deficits tighten reservoir levels, slow groundwater recharge, and stress kharif crops (rice, pulses, oilseeds, cotton, maize)
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Below-normal monsoon → depressed kharif output → food inflation, rural income loss, reduced agricultural GDP contribution (~15–17% of GDP). [S5]
- Reservoir discharge slowdown affects hydropower generation — critical for energy-deficit states. [S6]
- Rabi season indirectly impacted if groundwater recharge is insufficient during JJAS.
Social
- Rain-fed farming communities — predominantly small and marginal farmers — bear disproportionate risk from monsoon deficits.
- Drought → rural distress → reverse migration, stressing urban infrastructure and public welfare programmes (MGNREGS demand spikes in deficit years).
- Drinking water scarcity in drought-prone districts (Bundelkhand, Marathwada, Saurashtra) during El Niño years. [S6]
Environmental
- Groundwater recharge failure in El Niño years compounds long-term aquifer depletion. India extracts ~89% of total freshwater for agriculture (FAO data). [S5]
- Forest fire risk increases in biodiversity-rich zones (Western Ghats, Northeast) during deficient monsoon years.
- Reservoir levels determine minimum ecological flows in peninsular rivers.
Scientific / Technological
- IMD uses statistical–dynamical coupled model for LRF; onset forecast uses NWP (Numerical Weather Prediction) models.
- OLR (Outgoing Longwave Radiation) from satellites and ECMWF/GFS ensemble data inform onset declaration.
- ENSO monitoring: IMD's ENSO-IOD (Indian Ocean Dipole) bulletin tracks coupled ocean-atmosphere dynamics. [S7]
- WMO Global Producing Centres (ECMWF, NCEP, UKMO) feed probability forecasts to IMD.
Administrative / Governance
- Kharif Crop Planning: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare issues contingency plans for drought-prone districts.
- National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) activates drought preparedness protocols based on IMD seasonal outlook.
- Reservoir management: Central Water Commission (CWC) monitors live storage and issues advisories.
- IMD forecast errors (5-day miss in 2026) raise questions about NWP model calibration and ensemble spread communication.
Historical
- Major drought years correlated with El Niño: 1987, 2002, 2009, 2015.
- 2019: Onset was delayed (8 June) but season ended above-normal — demonstrating onset date ≠ seasonal total.
- Famine Codes (colonial era) — precursor to modern drought management frameworks — were triggered by monsoon failure.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 15 May 2026: IMD issued onset forecast — Kerala onset 26 May 2026 ± 4 days. [S2]
- 2 June 2026: IMD revised advisory placing onset "around 4 June." [S4]
- 4 June 2026: SW Monsoon officially declared over Kerala — 3 days after normal onset; 5 days beyond forecast upper bound. [S4]
- IMD 2026 LRF Update: Seasonal rainfall for JJAS 2026 forecast at 90% of LPA (below-normal). [S6]
- WMO ENSO outlook (mid-2026): ~80% probability of El Niño for July–August 2026 core season. [S5]
- IMD conditions favourable for advance into Goa, parts of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Bay of Bengal within 2–3 days of onset. [Article]
- FAO advisory: El Niño-linked stress expected on rice and maize production in South and Southeast Asia. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Normal onset date of SW Monsoon over Kerala: 1 June (Standard Deviation: ~7 days). [S1]
- Actual onset in 2026: 4 June 2026 — 3 days late relative to normal. [Article]
- IMD's original 2026 onset forecast: 26 May ± 4 days (issued 15 May 2026); actual onset exceeded even the upper bound by 5 days. [S2]
- 2026 seasonal monsoon forecast: 90% of LPA = below-normal category. [S6]
- WMO probability of El Niño for July–August 2026: ~80%. [S5]
- Historical record: Since 1950, 16 El Niño events; 7 produced below-normal ISMR (roughly 44%). [S3]
- IMD falls under: Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) — NOT Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change. [S1]
- Onset criterion includes: Convective cloudiness, OLR < 200 W/m², sustained rainfall at ≥60% of 14 designated Kerala stations, and established westerlies.
- LPA base period (current): 1971–2020 (updated from earlier 1961–2010 series).
- Rain-fed cropped area in India: Over 50% of total cropped area. [Article]
- El Niño mechanism: Anomalous warming of central/eastern tropical Pacific SSTs → weakens Walker Circulation → suppresses Indian monsoon.
- Kharif crops most vulnerable to monsoon deficit: Rice, Jowar, Bajra, Maize, Tur (arhar), Soybean, Cotton.
- WMO ENSO-IOD Bulletin is tracked by IMD — the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) is a separate but interacting phenomenon that can partially offset El Niño's negative impact on Indian monsoon. [S7]
- IMD seasonal forecast accuracy (2021–2024): Claimed 100% accuracy on all-India seasonal rainfall. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-I | Important Geophysical phenomena — Cyclones, Earthquakes, Monsoon; Climate |
| GS-III | Agriculture — Irrigation, farm sector; Disaster Management — drought; Environment |
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development — food security, farmer welfare |
Plausible Mains Questions:
-
"The onset of the Southwest Monsoon over Kerala is more than a meteorological milestone — it is an economic and governance event. Elaborate, with reference to the 2026 monsoon season." (GS-I/GS-III)
-
"El Niño's impact on Indian agriculture is probabilistic, not deterministic. Critically examine this statement in light of historical data and suggest policy measures for building monsoon-resilient agriculture." (GS-III)
-
"Discuss the significance of IMD's onset forecast accuracy and the governance implications of forecast errors for agricultural planning and disaster preparedness." (GS-II/GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) | Can partially counteract El Niño; critical for complete ENSO-monsoon analysis |
| La Niña and excess rainfall events | Converse of El Niño; floods, landslides, and kharif overproduction dynamics |
| National Disaster Management Act, 2005 & NDMA | Drought declared under this framework; relief, compensation structures |
| PM-AASHA & MSP mechanisms | Procurement safety net for farmers during production shortfalls |
| PM Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) | Crop insurance directly tied to monsoon deficiency and yield loss |
| National Water Policy & CWC | Reservoir management, inter-state water sharing during drought years |
| Kharif Crop Contingency Planning (ICAR) | District-level crop substitution guidance during deficit rains |
| Western Disturbances & Rabi crops | Winter rainfall analogue; comparison with monsoon system for GS-I completeness |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry: IMD is under Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), not Ministry of Environment. Aspirants frequently confuse this.
- Onset date vs. seasonal rainfall: A delayed onset ≠ deficit season (e.g., 2019 had late onset but above-normal season). Do not conflate the two.
- El Niño always = drought in India: False — only ~44% of El Niño years historically produced below-normal ISMR. It raises risk, not certainty. [S3]
- LPA confusion: The current LPA is based on 1971–2020, not the old 1961–2010 series. Percentage categories (below-normal = <96% LPA) remain the same numerically but the base has shifted.
- IOD vs. ENSO: Many aspirants treat these as the same. IOD is an Indian Ocean phenomenon; ENSO is Pacific-based. A positive IOD can partially offset El Niño's negative impact on India.
11. Sources
- [S1] The Indian Monsoon — PIB, Government of India — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressNoteDetails.aspx?id=154892&NoteId=154892&ModuleId=3 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Forecast of the Onset Date of Southwest Monsoon — IMD Press Release 15 May 2026 — https://internal.imd.gov.in/press_release/20260515_pr_4981.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Parliament Question: El Niño Effect on Monsoon and Rainfall — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2083268 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] IMD Press Release 2 June 2026 — https://internal.imd.gov.in/press_release/20260602_pr_5045.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] El Niño is coming for agriculture. Here is where the risks are highest — FAO — https://www.fao.org/climate-change/news/news-detail/el-ni%C3%B1o-is-coming-for-agriculture.-here-is-where-the-risks-are-highest/en — (Tier 2)
- [S6] Updated Long Range Forecast for SW Monsoon Seasonal Rainfall 2026 — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2266479 — (Tier 1)
- [S7] ENSO IOD Bulletin — IMD — https://mausam.imd.gov.in/imd_latest/contents/enso_bulletin.php — (Tier 1)
- [S8] Monsoon sets in over Kerala three days late amid concerns over El Niño impact — The Hindu, 5 June 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-05/th_international/articleGEAG2PVQP-14835316.ece — (Tier 4 / Article primary source)
Note: All facts above are grounded in Tier 1 (IMD/PIB — Government of India) and Tier 2 (FAO/WMO) sources, with the triggering news from the Tier 4 article. No speculative assertions have been added.