CLIMATE
Difference between Weather And Climate
1. Weather is the momentary state of the atmosphere and changes quickly, may be within a day or week.
2. Whereas Climate refers to the average of the weather condition over a longer period of time and it changes imperceptibly and may be noted after 50 years or even more.
Unity And Diversity in the Monsoon Climate
Unity of Climate
The monsoon regime emphasizes the unity of India with the rest of the southeast Asian region.
This view of broad unity of the monsoon type of climate should not, however, lead one to ignore its regional variations which differentiate the weather and climate of different regions of India.
The climate of Kerala and Tamil Nadu in the south are so different from that of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in the north, and yet all of these have a monsoon type of climate.
Diversity of Climate
The climate of India has many regional variations expressed in the pattern of: Winds, Temperature, Rainfall, Rhythm of seasons, Degree of wetness or dryness.
1. Temperature variations
While in the summer the mercury occasionally touches 55°C in the western Rajasthan, it drops down to as low as minus 45°C in winter around Leh.
Churu in Rajasthan may record a temperature of 50°C or more on a June day while the mercury hardly touches 19°C in Tawang (Arunachal Pradesh) on the same day.
On a December night, temperature in Drass (Jammu and Kashmir) may drop down to minus 45, while Thiruvananthapuram or Chennai on the same night records 20°C or 22°C.
In Kerala and in the Andaman Islands, the difference between day and night temperatures may hardly seven or eight degree Celsius. But in the Thar desert, if the day temperature is around 50°C night, it may drop down considerably up to 15°-20°C.
2. Regional Variations
While snowfall occurs in the Himalayas, it only rains over the rest of the country.
While Cherrapunji and Mawsynramin the Khasi Hills of Meghalaya receive rainfall over 1,080 cm in a year, Jaisalmer in Rajasthan rarely gets more than 9cm of rainfall during the same period.
Tura situated in the Garo Hills of Meghalaya may receive an amount of rainfall in a single day which is equal to 10 years of rainfall at Jaisalmer.
While the annual precipitation is less than 10 cm in the northwest Himalayas and the western deserts, it exceeds 400 cm in Meghalaya.
The Ganga delta and the coastal plains of Orissa are hit by strong rain-bearing storms almost every third or fih day in July and August while the Coromandal coast, a thousand km to the south, goes generally dry during these months.
Most parts of the country get rainfall during June-September, but on the coastal areas of Tamil Nadu, it rains in the beginning of the winter season.
Factors Determining the Climate of India
It can be broadly divided into two groups factors:
(i). Factors related to location and relief, and
(ii). Factors related to air pressure and winds.
Factors related to location and relief
1. Latitude
The tropical zone being nearer to the equator, experiences high temperatures throughout the year with small daily and annual range. Area north of the Tropic of Cancer being away from the equator experiences extreme climate with a high daily and annual range of temperature.
2. The Himalayan Mountains
They act as an effective climatic divide, and the towering mountain chain provides an invincible shield to protect the subcontinent from the cold northern winds. The Himalayas also trap the monsoon winds, forcing them to shed their moisture within the subcontinent.
3. Distribution of Land And Water
As compared to the landmass, water heats up or cools down slowly. This differential heating of land and sea creates different air pressure zones in different seasons in and around the Indian subcontinent. Difference in air pressure causes reversal in the direction of monsoon winds.
4. Distance From The Sea
With a long coastline, large coastal areas have an equable climate. Areas in the interior of India are far away from the moderating influence of the sea. Such areas have extremes of climate.
5. Altitude
Temperature decreases with height. Due to thin air, places in the mountains are cooler than places on the plains.
6. Relief
The Physiography or relief of India also affects the temperature, air pressure, direction and speed of wind and the amount and distribution of rainfall. The windward sides of Western Ghats and Assam receive high rainfall during June-September whereas the southern plateau remains dry due to its leeward situation along the Western Ghats.
Factors Relating to Air Pressure And Wind
Distribution of air pressure and winds on the surface of the earth. Upper air circulation caused by factors controlling global weather and the inflow of different air masses and jet streams.
Inflow of western cyclones generally known as disturbances during the winter season and tropical depressions during the south-west monsoon period into India, creating weather conditions favourable to rainfall.
Mechanism of Weather in the Winter Season
1. Surface Pressure and Winds
In winter months, the weather conditions over India are generally influenced by the distribution of pressure in Central and Western Asia. A high pressure centre in the region lying to the north of the Himalayas develops during winter. This centre of high pressure gives rise to the flow of air at the low level from the north towards the Indian subcontinent, south of the mountain range.
The surface winds blowing out of the high pressure centre over Central Asia reach India in the form of a dry continental air mass. These continental winds come in contact with trade winds over north- western India.
2. Jet Streams and Upper Air Circulation
Higher up in the lower troposphere, about 3 km above the surface of the earth, a different pattern of air circulation is observed.
The variations in the atmospheric pressure closer to the surface of the earth have no role to play in the making of upper air circulation.
All of Western and Central Asia remains under the influence of westerly winds along the altitude of 9-13 km from west to east.
These winds blow across the Asian continent at latitudes north of the Himalayas roughly parallel to the Tibetan highlands. These are known as jet streams. Branch blows in an eastward direction, south of the Himalayas.
It has its mean position at 25°N in February at 200-300 mb level. It is believed that this southern branch of the jet stream exercises an important influence on the winter weather in India
3. Western Cyclonic Disturbance and Tropical Cyclones
The western cyclonic disturbances which enter the Indian subcontinent from the west and the northwest during the winter months, originate over the Mediterranean Sea and are brought into India by the westerly jet stream.
An increase in the prevailing night temperature generally indicates an advance in the arrival of these cyclones disturbances.
Tropical cyclones originate over the Bay of Bengal and the Indian ocean. These tropical cyclones have very high wind velocity and heavy rainfall and hit the Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Orissa coast.
Most of these cyclones are very destructive due to high wind velocity and torrential rain that accompanies.
Mechanisms of weather in the summer season
1. Surface Pressure and Winds
As the summer sets in and the sun shifts northwards, the wind circulation over the subcontinent undergoes a complete reversal at both, the lower as well as the upper levels.
By the middle of July, the low pressure belt nearer the surface (termed as Inter Tropical Convergence Zone(ITCZ)) shifts northwards, By this time, the westerly jet stream withdraws from the Indian region.
It is generally believed that there is a cause and effect relationship between the ITCZ and jet stream. The ITCZ being a zone of low pressure attracts inflow of winds from different directions.
The maritime tropical air mass (mT) from the southern hemisphere, after crossing the equator, rushes to the low pressure area in the general south-westerly direction. It is this moist air current which is popularly known as the southwest monsoon.
2. Jet Streams and Upper Air Circulation
An easterly jet stream flows over the southern part of the Peninsula in June, and has a maximum speed of 90km per hour. In August, it is confined to 15º N latitude, and in September up to 22º N latitudes.
The easterlies normally do not extend to the north of 30º N latitude in the upper atmosphere.
3. Easterly Jet Streams and Tropical Cyclones
The easterly jet stream steers the tropical depressions into India. These depressions play a significant role in the distribution of monsoon rainfall over the Indian subcontinent.
The tracks of these depressions are the areas of highest rainfall in India. The frequency at which these depressions visit India, their direction and intensity, all go a long way in determining the rainfall pattern during the southwest monsoon period.
Inter Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ)
The Inter Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is a low pressure zone located at the equator where trade winds converge, and so, it is a zone where air tends to ascend.
In July, the ITCZ is located around 20°N-25°N latitudes (over the Gangetic plain), sometimes called the monsoon trough.
This monsoon trough encourages the development of thermal low over north and northwest India.
Due to the shift of ITCZ, the trade winds of the southern hemisphere cross the equator between 40° and 60°E longitudes and start blowing from southwest to northeast due to the Coriolis force.
It becomes southwest monsoon. In winter, the ITCZ moves southward, and so the reversal of winds from northeast to south and southwest, takes place. They are called northeast monsoons.
The Nature of Indian Monsoon
1. Onset of the Monsoon
During April and May when the sun shines vertically over the Tropic of Cancer, the large landmass in the north of Indian Ocean gets intensely heated. This causes the formation of an intense low pressure in the north-western part of the subcontinent.
Since the pressure in the Indian Ocean in the south of the landmass is high as water gets heated slowly, the low pressure cell attracts the southeast trades across the Equator. These conditions help in the northward shift in the position of the ITCZ.
The southwest monsoon may thus be seen as a continuation of the southeast trades deflected towards the Indian subcontinent after crossing the Equator.
These winds cross the Equator between 40°E and 60°E longitudes.
Entry of monsoon into India: The southwest monsoon sets in over the Kerala coast.
2. Rain-bearing Systems and Rainfall Distribution
There are two rain-bearing systems in India.
(i). Bay of Bengal causing rainfall over the plains of north India,
(ii). The Arabian Sea current of the south- west monsoon which brings rain to the west coast of India.
Much of the rainfall along the Western Ghats is orographic as the moist air is obstructed and forced to rise along the Ghats.
The intensity of rainfall over the west coast of India is, however, related to two factors:
(i). The offshore meteorological conditions.
(ii). The position of the equatorial jet stream along the eastern coast of Africa.
3. Break in the Monsoon
During the south-west monsoon period after having rains for a few days, if rain fails to occur for one or more weeks, it is known as a break in the monsoon. These dry spells are quite common during the rainy season.
These breaks are in the different regions are due to different reasons:
(i). In northern India rains are likely to fail if the rain-bearing storms are not very frequent along the monsoon trough or the ITCZ over this region.
(ii). Over the west coast the dry spells are associated with days when winds blow parallel to the coast.
El Nino and Indian Monsoon
EI-Nino is a complex weather system that appears once every three to seven years, bringing drought, floods and other weather extremes to different parts of the world.
The system involves oceanic and atmospheric phenomena with the appearance of warm currents off the coast of Peru in the Eastern Pacific and affects weather in many places including India.
EI-Nino is merely an extension of the warm equatorial current which gets replaced temporarily by cold Peruvian current or Humboldt current (locate these currents in your atlas). This current increases the temperature of water on the Peruvian coast by 10°C. This results in:
(i). The distortion of equatorial atmospheric circulation;
(ii). Irregularities in the evaporation of seawater;
(iii). Reduction in the amount of planktons which further reduces the number of fish in the sea.
(iv). The word EI-Nino means Child Christ because this current app ears around Christmas in December. December is a summer month in Peru (Southern Hemisphere).
(v). EI-Nino is used in India for forecasting long range monsoon rainfall. In 1990-91, there was a wild EI-Nino event and the onset of southwest monsoon was delayed over most parts of the country ranging from five to twelve days.
The Rhythm of Season
The climatic conditions of India can best be described in terms of an annual cycle of seasons. four seasons-
(i). The cold weather season,
(ii). The hot weather season,
(iii). The southwest monsoon season,
(iv). The retreating monsoon season.
The Cold Weather Season
1. Temperature
Found from November to February
December and January are the coldest months in the northern plain. The mean daily temperature remains below 21°C, over most parts of northern India.
The night temperature may be quite low, sometimes going below freezing point in Punjab and Rajasthan.
There are three main reasons for the excessive cold in north India during this season:
(i). States like Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan being far away from the moderating influence of sea experience continental climate.
(ii). The snowfall in the nearby Himalayan ranges creates cold wave situation; and
(iii). Around February, the cold winds coming from the Caspian Sea and Turkmenistan bring cold wave along with frost and fog over the north-western parts of India.
2. Pressure and Winds
By the end of December (22nd December), the sun shines vertically over the Tropic of Capricorn in the southern hemisphere.
The weather in this season is characterised by feeble high pressure conditions over the northern plain. In south India, the air pressure is slightly lower.
As a result, winds start blowing from the north-western high pressure zone to the low air pressure zone over the Indian Ocean in the south. Due to low pressure gradient, the light winds with a low velocity of about 3-5 km per hour begin to blow outwards. By and large, the topography of the region influences the wind direction. They are westerly or north-westerly down the Ganga Valley. They become northerly in the Ganga-Brahmaputra delta. Free from the influence of topography, they are clearly north-easterly over the Bay of Bengal.
During the winters, the weather in India is pleasant. The pleasant weather conditions, however, at intervals, get disturbed by shallow cyclonic depressions originating over the east Mediterranean Sea and travelling eastwards across West Asia, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan before they reach the north-western parts of India.
3. Rainfall
Winter monsoons do not cause rainfall as they move from land to the sea. It is because firstly, they have little humidity; and secondly, due to anti cyclonic circulation on land, the possibility of rainfall from them reduces. So, most parts of India do not have rainfall in the winter season.
However, there are some exceptions to it are:
In north- western India, some weak temperate cyclones from the Mediterranean Sea cause rainfall in Punjab, Haryana, Delhi and western Uttar Pradesh. Although the amount is meagre, it is highly beneficial for Rabi crops. The precipitation is in the form of snowfall in the lower Himalayas. It is this snow that sustains the flow of water in the Himalayan Rivers during the summer months.
Central parts of India and northern parts of southern Peninsula also get winter rainfall occasionally. Arunachal Pradesh and Assam in the north-eastern parts of India also have rains between 25 mm and 50 mm during these winter months.
During October and November, northeast monsoon while crossing over the Bay of Bengal, picks up moisture and causes torrential rainfall over the Tamil Nadu coast, southern Andhra Pradesh, southeast Karnataka and southeast Kerala.
The Hot Weather Season
1. Temperature
With the apparent northward movement of the sun towards the Tropic of Cancer in March, temperatures start rising in north India. April, May and June are the months of summer in north India. In most parts of India, temperature recorded are between 30°-32°C.
In March, the highest day temperature of about 38°C occurs in the Deccan Plateau while in April, temperature ranging between 38°C and 43°C are found in Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh.
In May, the heat belt moves further north, and in the north-western part of India, temperatures around 48°C are not uncommon.
Temperatures remain between 26°C and 32°C. Due to altitude, the temperatures in the hills of Western Ghats remain below 25°C.
In the coastal regions, the north-south extent of isotherms parallel to the coast confirms that temperature does not decrease from north to south rather it increases from the coast to the interior.
The mean daily minimum temperature during the summer months also remains quite high and rarely goes below 26°C.
2. Pressure and Winds
The summer months are a period of excessive heat and falling air pressure in the northern half of the country. Roughly, this elongated low pressure monsoon trough extends over the Thar desert in the north west to Patna and Chhotanagpur plateau in the east-southeast.
The location of the ITCZ attracts a surface circulation of the winds which are south-westerly on the west coast as well as along the coast of West Bengal and Bangladesh. They are easterly or south-easterly over north Bengal and Bihar.
In the heart of the ITCZ in the northwest, the dry and hot winds known as ‘Loo’, blow in the afternoon, and very often, they continue to well into midnight.
Dust storms in the evening are very common during May in Punjab, Haryana, Eastern Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.
A sudden contact between dry and moist air masses gives rise to local storms of great intensity. The local storms are associated with violent winds, torrential rains and even hailstorms.
3. Some Famous Local Storms of Hot Weather Season
(i). Mango Shower : Towards the end of summer, there are pre-monsoon showers which are a common phenomena in Kerala and coastal areas of Karnataka. Locally, they are known as mango showers since they help in the early ripening of mangoes.
(ii). Blossom Shower : With this shower, coffee flowers blossom in Kerala and nearby areas.
(iii). Nor Westers : These are dreaded evening thunderstorms in Bengal and Assam. Their notorious nature can be understood from the local nomenclature of ‘Kalbaisakhi’, a calamity of the month of Baisakh. These showers are useful for tea, jute and rice cultivation. In Assam, these storms are known as “Bardoli Chheerha”.
(iv). Loo : Hot, dry and oppressing winds blowing in the Northern plains from Punjab to Bihar with high intensity between Delhi and Patna.
The Southwest Monsoon Season
Increase of temperature in May over the northwester plains, the low pressure conditions over there get further intensified.
By early June, they are powerful enough to attract the trade winds of Southern Hemisphere coming from the Indian Ocean.
These southeast trade winds cross the equator and enter the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea, passing over the equatorial warm currents, they bring with them moisture in abundance.
After crossing the equator, they follow a south- westerly direction. That is why they are known as southwest monsoons.
The rain in the southwest monsoon season begins rather abruptly. One result of the first rain is that it brings down the temperature substantially.
This sudden onset of the moisture-laden winds associated with violent thunder and lightning, is often termed as the “break” or “burst” of the monsoons.
The monsoon approaches the landmass in two branches:
(i). The Arabian Sea branch,
(ii). The Bay of Bengal branch.
1. Monsoon Winds of the Arabian Sea branch
The monsoon winds originating over the Arabian Sea further split into three branches :
(a). Its one branch is obstructed by the Western Ghats. These winds climb the slopes of the Western Ghats from 900-1200 m. Soon, they become cool, and as a result, the windward side of the Sahyadris and Western Coastal Plain receive very heavy rainfall ranging between 250 cm and 400 cm. After crossing the Western Ghats, these winds descend and get heated up.
(b). Another branch of the Arabian sea monsoon strikes the coast north of Mumbai. Moving along Narmada and Tapi river valleys, these winds cause rainfall in extensive areas of central India. The Chhotanagpur plateau gets 15 cm rainfall from this part of the branch. Thereafter, they enter the Ganga plains and mingle with the Bay of Bengal branch.
(c) A third branch of this monsoon wind strikes the Saurashtra Peninsula and the Kachchh. It then passes over west Rajasthan and along the Aravalli's, causing only a scanty rainfall. In Punjab and Haryana, it too joins the Bay of Bengal branch. These two branches, reinforced by each other, caused rains in the western Himalayas.
2. Monsoon Winds of The Bay of Bengal
The Bay of Bengal branch strikes the coast of Myanmar and part of south east Bangladesh. But the Arakan Hills along the coast of Myanmar deflect a big portion of this branch towards the Indian subcontinent.
The monsoon, therefore, enters West Bengal and Bangladesh from south and southeast instead from the south-westerly direction. From here, this branch splits in to two under the influence of the Himalayas and the thermal low is northwest India.
Its one branch moves westward along the Ganga plains reaching as far as the Punjab plains. The other branch moves up the Brahmaputra valley in the north and the northeast, causing widespread rains. Its sub-branch strikes the Garo and Khasi hills of Meghalaya. Mawsynram, located on the crest of Khasi hills, receives the highest average annual rainfall in the world.
Tamilnadu coast remains dry during this season. There are two factors responsible for it are :
(a). The Tamil Nadu coast is situated parallel to the Bay of Bengal branch of southwest monsoon.
(b). It lies in the rain- shadow area of the Arabian Sea branch of the south-west monsoon.
Characteristics of Monsoon Rainfall
I). The southwest monsoon- Seasonal in character, occurs between June and September.
II). It is largely governed by relief or topography.
III). It has a declining trend with increasing distance from the sea.
IV). The monsoon rains occur in wet spells of a few days duration at a time. The wet spells are interspersed with rainless intervals known as breaks.
V). The summer rainfall comes in a heavy downpour leading to considerable runoff and soil erosion.
VI). It plays a pivotal role in the agrarian economy of India because over three-fourths of the total rain in the country is received during the south- west monsoon season.
VII). Its spatial distribution is also uneven which ranges from 12 cm to more than 250 cm.
VIII). The beginning of the rains sometimes is considerably delayed over the whole or a part of the country.
IX). The rains sometimes end considerably earlier than usual, causing great damage to standing crops and making the sowing of winter crops difficult
Season of Retreating Monsoon
The months of October and November are known for retreating monsoons.
By the end of September, the southwest monsoon becomes weak as the low pressure trough of the Ganga plain starts moving southward in response to the southward march of the sun.
The retreating southwest monsoon season is marked by clear skies and rise in temperature. The land is still moist. Owing to the conditions of high temperature and humidity, the weather becomes rather oppressive. This Is commonly known as the October heat.
The weather in the retreating monsoon is dry in north India but it is associated with rain in the eastern part of the Peninsula. Here, October and November are the rainiest months of the year.
The widespread rain in this season is associated with the passage of cyclonic depressions which originate over the Andaman Sea and manage to cross the eastern coast of the southern Peninsula.
These tropical cyclones are very destructive. The thickly populated deltas of the Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri are their preferred targets.
A few cyclonic storms also strike the coast of West Bengal, Bangladesh and Myanmar. A bulk of the rainfall of the Coromondal coast is derived from these depressions and cyclones. Such cyclonic storms are less frequent in the Arabian Sea.
Distribution And Variability of Rainfall
1. Distribution of Rainfall
The average annual rainfall in India is about 125 cm, but it has great spatial variations. They are :
Areas of High Rainfall : The highest rainfall occurs along the west coast, on the Western Ghats, as well as in the sub-Himalayan areas is the northeast and the hills of Meghalaya. Here the rainfall exceeds 200 cm. In some parts of Khasi and Jaintia hills, the rainfall exceeds 1,000 cm. In the Brahmaputra valley and the adjoining hills, the rainfall is less than 200 cm.
Areas of Medium Rainfall : Rainfall between 100-200 cm is received in the southern parts of Gujarat, east Tamil Nadu, north-eastern Peninsula covering Odisha, Jharkhand, Bihar, eastern Madhya Pradesh, northern Ganga plain along the sub-Himalayas and the Cachar Valley and Manipur.
Areas of Low Rainfall : Western Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, eastern Rajasthan, Gujarat and Deccan Plateau receive rainfall between 50-100 cm.
Areas of Inadequate Rainfall : Parts of the Peninsula, especially in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Maharashtra, Ladakh and most of western Rajasthan receive rainfall below 50 cm. Snowfall is restricted to the Himalayan region.
2. Variability of Rainfall
The variability of rainfall is computed with the help of the following formula:
C.V = Standard Deviation/Mean × 100 (here CV is the coefficient of variation).
A variability of less than 25 percent exists on the western coasts, Western Ghats, north eastern Peninsula, eastern plains of the Ganga, north eastern India, Uttaranchal and Himachal Pradesh and south-western part of Jammu and Kashmir. These areas have an annual rainfall of over 100 cm.
A variability of over 50 per cent exists in the western part of Rajasthan, northern part of Jammu and Kashmir and interior parts of the Deccan plateau. These areas have an annual rainfall of less than 50 cm.
Rest of India have a variability of 25-50 per cent and these areas receive an annual rainfall between 50 -100 cm.
Climatic Regions Of India
The whole of India has a monsoon type of climate. But the combination of elements of the weather, however, reveal many regional variations. These variations represent the sub types of the monsoon climate. It is on this basis that the climatic regions can be identified.
Koeppen’s Classification
Koeppen based his scheme of Climatic classification on monthly values of temperature and precipitation. He identified five major climatic types, namely:
i). Tropical climates, where mean monthly temperature throughout the year is over 18°C.
ii). Dry climates, where precipitation is very low in comparison to temperature, and hence, dry. If dryness is less, it is semiarid (S); if it is more, the climate is arid(W).
iii). Warm temperate climates, where mean temperature of the coldest month is between 18°C and minus 3°C.
iv). Cool temperate climates, where mean temperature of the warmest month is over 10°C, and mean temperature of the coldest month is under minus 3°C.
v). Ice climates, where mean temperature of the warmest month is under 10°C.
Climatic Regions of India according to Koeppen's Scheme.
Types of climate
- Amw Monsoon with short dry season
- As – Monsoon with dry summer
- Aw – Tropical savannah
- Bwhw – Semi-arid steppe climate
- Bwhw – Hot desert
- Cwg – Monsoon with dry winter
- Dfc – Cold humid winter with short summer
- E – Polar type
Areas
- West coast of India south of Goa
- Coromandel coast of Tamil Nadu
- Most of the Peninsular plateaus, south of the Tropic of Cancer
- North-western Gujarat, some parts of western Rajasthan and Punjab
- Extreme western Rajasthan
- Ganga plain, eastern Rajasthan, northern Madhya Pradesh, most of North-east India
- Arunachal Pradesh
- Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand
Monsoons and the Economic Life in India
Monsoon is that axis around which revolves the entire agricultural cycle of India. It is because about 64 percent of people in India depend on agriculture for their livelihood and agriculture itself is based on southwest monsoon.
Except Himalayas all the parts of the country have temperature above the threshold level to grow the crops or plants throughout the year..
Regional variations in monsoon climate help in growing various types of crops.
Variability of rainfall brings droughts or floods every year in some parts of the country.
Agricultural prosperity of India depends very much on timely and adequately distributed rainfall. If it fails, agriculture is adversely affected particularly in those regions where means of irrigation are not developed.
Sudden monsoon bursts create problems of soil erosion over large areas in India.
Winter rainfall by temperate cyclones in north India is highly beneficial for rabi crops.
Regional climatic variation in India is reflected in the vast variety of food, clothes and house types.
Global Warming
Besides the natural causes, human activities such as large scale industrialisation and presence of polluting gas in the atmosphere are also important factors responsible for global warming.
The temperature of the world is significantly increasing. Carbon dioxide produced by human activities is a major source of concern. This gas, released to the atmosphere in large quantities by burning of fossil fuel, is increasing gradually.
Other gases like methane, chlorofluorocarbons, and nitrous oxide which are present in much smaller concentrations in the atmosphere, together with carbon dioxide are known as Greenhouse gases. These gases are better absorbers of long wave radiations than carbon dioxide, therefore contributing to global warming.
It is projected that by the year 2,100, global temperature will warm about 2°C. This rise in temperature will accompany many other changes :
i). One of these is a rise in sea level, as glacier and sea ice melt in response to warming. This would increase the incidence of annual flooding.
ii). Climatic change would promote insect-borne diseases like malaria, and lead to shift in climatic boundaries, making some regions wetter and others drier.
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