Missed call


Missed Call: India's Southwest Monsoon 2026 — Deficient Season Outlook


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Normal onset date, Kerala June 1 (±4 days margin)
2026 actual onset June 4, 2026 [S4]
Seasonal forecast 90% of LPA (below normal) [S1]
Model error ±4% [S1]
Probability of deficient year 60% [S2][S4]
Probability of below-normal or less 84% [S1]
LPA definition Average rainfall 1971–2020 = ~87 cm [S1]
Below normal threshold <96% of LPA
Deficient threshold <90% of LPA
Regions forecast to fall short Northwest India, Central India, Peninsula, Monsoon Core Zone [S4]
Region forecast normal Northeast India only [S4]
ENSO state Transitioning from neutral to El Niño [S1]
IOD state Neutral, turning positive late-season [S1]
Implementing agency IMD under Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES)
Monsoon Mission Launched 2012, MoES; developed MMCFS model
Key El Niño drought years 2002, 2009 (worst 21st-century droughts) [S4]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Geopolitical / Strategic


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. Normal onset date of Southwest Monsoon over Kerala: June 1 (±4 days margin of error).
  2. The 2026 monsoon reached Kerala on June 4 — first IMD onset misjudgment beyond margin of error since 2015. [S4]
  3. IMD's 2026 seasonal forecast: 90% of Long Period Average (LPA) — classified as "below normal." [S1]
  4. "Deficient" monsoon classification = seasonal rainfall below 90% of LPA.
  5. IMD assigned 60% probability of deficient monsoon for 2026 — most pessimistic call in a decade. [S2]
  6. 84% probability of below-normal or worse rainfall in 2026. [S1]
  7. The LPA reference period used by IMD: 1971–2020 (≈87 cm for the country as a whole).
  8. IMD's Monsoon Mission was launched in 2012 under the Ministry of Earth Sciences with a ₹400 crore outlay.
  9. MMCFS (Monsoon Mission Climate Forecast System) is the dynamical model underpinning IMD's seasonal forecasts. [S1]
  10. El Niño suppresses monsoon rainfall via weakening of the Walker Circulation; ~60% of El Niño years since 1951 saw deficient/below-normal rain. [S4]
  11. Worst El Niño-linked droughts of the 21st century: 2002 and 2009. [S4]
  12. In 2019, a strong positive IOD offset El Niño, producing near-normal rainfall — cited as a counter-example.
  13. For 2026, IOD forecast to turn positive only late in the season — insufficient to counteract El Niño. [S1]
  14. Only Northeast India forecast to receive normal rainfall in 2026; Northwest, Central, Peninsula, and Monsoon Core Zone all below normal. [S4]
  15. IMD issues a two-stage Long Range Forecast: Stage 1 in April, updated Stage 2 in late May/early June.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-I: Important Geophysical phenomena — monsoon mechanism, El Niño/La Niña, IOD. - GS-III: Agriculture — food security, crop production, irrigation, drought management; Disaster Management — drought.

Syllabus Headings: - Important Geophysical phenomena such as earthquakes, tsunami, volcanic activity, cyclone etc., geographical features and their location (GS-I) - Food security in India, issues of buffer stocks and food security; Technology missions; economics of farm-produce (GS-III) - Disaster and disaster management (GS-III)

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The India Meteorological Department's 2026 pre-season forecast signals a potentially deficient southwest monsoon. Examine the climatic drivers behind this forecast and assess India's institutional preparedness to mitigate its socio-economic consequences." 2. "The El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) are two key modulators of India's monsoon. Analyse their interaction and the implications of a divergent ENSO–IOD phase for agricultural planning." 3. "India's dependence on the southwest monsoon for food security remains structurally unreduced despite decades of irrigation expansion. Critically examine the reasons and suggest policy interventions."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Primary driver of 2026 monsoon suppression; mechanism frequently tested in Prelims.
Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) Countervailing force to ENSO; IOD–monsoon interaction is a standard GS-I topic.
Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) Key policy response to crop loss from deficient rainfall; GS-II/III.
National Water Policy & Jal Shakti Mission Drought-year reservoir and groundwater management; GS-III.
Monsoon Mission (MoES) Institutional backdrop for IMD's predictive capability improvement.
Drought Manual / NDMA Drought Guidelines Disaster management framework triggered by deficient monsoon; GS-III.
Green Revolution & Rain-fed Agriculture Structural context for why deficient rain disproportionately hits marginal farmers.
Strait of Hormuz & India's fertilizer imports Geopolitical dimension compounding the 2026 agricultural stress.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "Late onset = bad season" — WRONG. The article explicitly states that onset date has little statistical bearing on seasonal totals; aspirants conflate the two. [S4]
  2. Confusing "below normal" with "deficient": Below normal = 90–96% of LPA; Deficient = <90% LPA. These are distinct IMD categories with different thresholds.
  3. IMD under Ministry of Science & Technology — WRONG. IMD is under the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), not MoST.
  4. El Niño always causes drought in India — INCORRECT. ~40% of El Niño years have seen normal or above-normal rain (e.g., 2019 with positive IOD offset). The correlation is probabilistic, not deterministic.
  5. LPA reference period: Aspirants often quote the old 50-year average (1951–2000). IMD updated to 1971–2020 — use the current base period.
  6. Conflating IMD with ICAR: IMD (weather/climate forecasting) vs. ICAR (agricultural research/contingency crop planning) — different ministries, different mandates, both relevant to monsoon response.

11. Sources