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Monsoon Retreat Begins From Parts Of North India: Met Department

The southwest monsoon has retreated from parts of west Rajasthan and Punjab on Monday being 11 days late.

Farmers hand-pick cotton in a field in Sirsa, Haryana, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)
Farmers hand-pick cotton in a field in Sirsa, Haryana, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

The southwest monsoon retreated from parts of west Rajasthan and Punjab on Monday, 11 days after his normal withdrawal date, the India Meteorological Department said.

Conditions are becoming favourable for its further withdrawal from some more parts of Rajasthan and Punjab and some parts of Haryana, Chandigarh, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh during next two to three days, the IMD said.

"The southwest monsoon has withdrawn from some parts of west Rajasthan and Punjab today, Sept. 28th, 2020," it said. Dry weather is likely to prevail over parts of north India for the next five days.

The official rainfall season in the country starts from June 1 to Sept. 30.

This year, the monsoon made an onset over Kerala on June 1, its normal onset date. It covered the entire country on June 26, nearly a fortnight more than its normal schedule.

According to the revised date, the new normal date for the monsoon to cover the entire country is July 8. The earlier normal date for the monsoon to cover the entire country was July 15.

The monsoon has also withdrawn late this year. The new normal withdrawal date for the monsoon to retreat from west Rajasthan is Sept. 17, while the earlier normal date for the monsoon to withdraw from west Rajasthan was July 15.

While the monsoon was retreating from parts of north India, other parts of the country will continue to receive rainfall.

A trough runs from a cyclonic circulation over east Bihar to west-central Bay of Bengal, off Andhra Pradesh coast across Gangetic West Bengal and coastal Odisha.

Under the influence of this system, scattered to fairly widespread rainfall with moderate thunderstorm and lightning are very likely over south peninsular India during the next three days, the weatherman said.

Isolated heavy rainfall is very likely over Tamil Nadu during the next two days, the IMD added.

According to the weather department, monsoon is set to end on an above-normal note. Until Sept. 27, the country had received 9% more rainfall than the normal.

Rainfall in the range of 96-104% of the Long Period Average is considered as 'normal'; 104-106% of the LPA as 'above normal'. Anything beyond 110% is considered as 'excess'.