Nationwide rainfall in July is likely to stay below 94% of the long-period average, the India Meteorological Department says — yet a well-marked low-pressure area over the northwest Bay of Bengal is keeping the monsoon in an active phase over central India for the next four to five days.
The rains will be uneven. Northwest, northeast and parts of east-central India are likely to see normal or above-normal rainfall, while much of the rest of the country faces a deficit. IMD also expects above-normal day and night temperatures across most regions, adding to heat stress and power demand, with weak El Niño conditions that may strengthen through the season.
Comfortable grain buffers, wider irrigation and crop insurance mean India faces a dry spell far better cushioned than in the past.
At a Glance
- July outlook: Below 94% of long-period average
- Normal (1971–2020): 280.4 mm for the month
- Active now: Central India, next 4–5 days
- Better rains: Northwest, northeast, parts of east-central
The constructive response is to accelerate resilience already under way — wider drip irrigation, faster reservoir de-silting, watershed revival and climate-smart seeds — while sharpening real-time advisories so farmers can adjust sowing decisions quickly.
With record foodgrain buffers and a diversified rural economy, a difficult season can become a demonstration of India’s growing agricultural resilience rather than a setback.













