Blitz Bureau
The India Meteorological Department expects July rainfall nationwide to stay below 94% of the long-period average, following one of the driest Junes on record — a spell that puts a premium on careful water management as kharif sowing gathers pace across the countryside.
The picture will be markedly uneven. Parts of northwest, northeast and east-central India are likely to see normal to above-normal rain even as the national total runs light, and above-normal day and night temperatures are expected across much of the country. July matters more than any other month, contributing the largest share of the season’s rainfall at a long-period average of about 280 millimetres.
Comfortable grain buffers, wider irrigation and crop insurance mean India meets an uneven monsoon far better cushioned than in the past.
At a Glance
- July outlook: Below 94% of long-period average
- Context: Follows one of the driest Junes on record
- Better placed: NW, NE & east-central India
- Also likely: Above-normal temperatures in many regions
The constructive response is to accelerate resilience already under way — drip irrigation, reservoir de-silting, watershed revival and climate-smart seeds — while districts short of rain lean on irrigation and buffer stocks, and heavy-rain pockets prioritise drainage and safe storage. Real-time IMD advisories reaching farmers quickly can turn a difficult forecast into timely action.
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. The task for the weeks ahead is delivery: getting water, seed and guidance to the fields that need them most.













