Blitz Bureau
A well-marked low-pressure area over the northwest Bay of Bengal, feeding an active monsoon trough, is delivering heavy rain across central India this week — with Madhya Pradesh among the wettest — even as the India Meteorological Department expects July rainfall nationwide to stay below 94% of the long-period average.
The IMD says the active spell will keep rain going over central and peninsular India for the next two to three days as the system moves inland. The month’s picture, though, will be uneven: some regions gain while others fall short, and above-normal day and night temperatures are likely across much of the country.
Comfortable grain buffers, wider irrigation and crop insurance mean India meets an uneven monsoon far better cushioned than in the past.
At a Glance
- Active now: Central India, next 2–3 days
- Wettest: Madhya Pradesh and neighbouring areas
- July outlook: Below 94% of long-period average
- Also likely: Above-normal temperatures in many regions
For farmers, the priority in a heavy spell shifts to drainage, safe storage and timely advisories, while districts short of rain lean on irrigation and buffers. The constructive response is to accelerate resilience already under way — drip irrigation, reservoir de-silting, watershed revival and climate-smart seeds.
With record foodgrain stocks and a more diversified rural economy, an uneven season can become a demonstration of India’s growing agricultural resilience rather than a setback — provided real-time guidance reaches farmers fast.













