(India cloud cover on June 25, 2013 [left frame] compared to India cloud cover on June 25 of 2014 [right frame]. Note the almost complete lack of storms over India for this year compared to 2013 when almost the entire country was blanketed by rains. Image source:LANCE-MODIS.)
India’s
Rain Pattern Has Changed
It’s
not just that 2014 is a bad year for India. It’s that the current
weakened monsoon comes at the tail end of a long period in which the
rains have increasingly failed. Where in the past it took a strong El
Nino to stall the rains, ever-increasing human atmospheric and ocean
warming have pushed the threshold for Monsoonal failure ever lower.
Now even the hint of El Nino is enough to set off a dry spell. A
growing trend of moisture loss that is bound to have more and more
severe consequences.
A
new study by Stanford University bears out these
observations in stark detail. For the yearly monsoon that delivers
fully 80 percent of India’s rains has fallen in intensity by more
than 10% since 1951. And though a 10% loss may seem relatively minor,
year on year, the effects are cumulative. Overall, the prevalence of
dry years increased from 1981 to 2011 by 27% and the number of years
experiencing 3 or more dry spells doubled.
Meanwhile,
though a general drying trend has taken hold, rain that does occur
happens in more intense bursts, with more rain falling over shorter
periods. These newly intensified storms are more damaging to lands
and homes, resulting in both increasing destruction of property while
also greatly degrading the land through more intense erosion.
25
Percent of India’s Land is Turning to Desert
Loss
of annual monsoonal rains is coming along with a dwindling of water
flows from the melting Himalayan glaciers. These two climate change
induced drying effects are already having stark impacts.
For
according to the Indian Government’s Fifth National Report on
Desertification, Land Degradation and Drought, a quarter of India’s
land mass is now experiencing desertification even as 32 percent is
suffering significant degradation due to heightening dryness and
erosion. This amounts to more than 80 million hectares of land facing
desertification while more than 100 million hectares are steadily
degrading. The report also noted that areas vulnerable to drought had
expanded to cover 68% of the Indian subcontinent.
Desertification
and loss of biological potential will restrict the transformation of
dry lands into productive ecosystems. Climate change will further
challenge the livelihood of those living in these sensitive
ecosystems and may result in higher levels of resource scarcity.
Monsoonal
Delay, Weakening Continues
(India daily rainfall as of June 26, 2014. Image source: India Monsoon.)
By
today, June 26, the long disrupted and weakened monsoon continues to
sputter. Moisture flow remains delayed by 1-2 weeks even as the
overall volume of rainfall is greatly reduced. Though storms have
exploded over some provinces, resulting in flash flooding, much of
the country remained abnormally dry. Overall, preliminary negative
rainfall departures remained at greater than 40% below average for
most of the nation with only five provinces receiving normal rainfall
and the remaining 31 receiving either deficient or scant totals.
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Tip to Colorado Bob
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