Mountainous northeastern India receives erratic rainfall

IANS  |  Agartala/Guwahati 

Mountainous northeastern has experienced uneven pre-monsoon rains, though recorded 71 per cent excess rainfall, officials of the Meteorological Department (IMD) said.

According to an IMD report available with IANS, the pre-monsoon (March to May) rainfall was almost normal in Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland, and Tripura, though there was a seven per cent deficit in average rainfall in these meteorological sub-divisions.

The eight northeastern states are divided into four meteorological sub-divisions.

According to the IMD report, during the three-month-long pre-monsoon period, sub-division witnessed the highest deficit of 32 per cent rainfall, recording 507.8 mm rainfall (actual) against the average of 750.4 mm.

With 23 per cent deficit, and sub-division recorded 451.7 mm rainfall (actual) against the average of 590.2 mm.

Meghalaya's Cherrapunjee holds the record of being the second wettest place on earth, even as Mawsynram, also in Meghalaya, now holds the Guinness record for the highest amount of rainfall -- 11,873 mm -- in a year. Cherrapunjee still holds the record for the highest amount of rainfall in a calendar month, with 9,300 mm of rain recorded in July 1861.

The IMD report said that the Nagaland, Manipur, and sub-division recorded 461.7 mm (actual) rainfall during the pre-monsoon period against normal average of 494.1 mm.

Though there is a seven per cent deficit in pre-monsoon rainfall, according to the IMD standard this is considered as normal.

and adjoining form a separate sub-division of IMD and during the pre-monsoon period witnessed 466.8 mm rainfall (actual) against the average of 457.1 mm rainfall, registering a two per cent surplus.

IMD said that during the pre-monsoon period, Tripura witnessed a record 71 per cent excess rainfall. From March 1 to May 31 -- over 985 mm against the average of 574.2 mm.

According to officials of the Tripura Agriculture Department, during last month's floods caused by heavy pre-monsoon rainfall, standing crops valued at Rs 3.90 crore have been damaged and around 4,500 farmers were affected by the deluge in district alone.

The four-month-long monsoon, however, also caused floods, landslides and erosion in the mountainous northeast India, specially in Assam, Manipur, and These states witnessed many deaths last year due to floods and landslides.

alone reported more than 150 deaths due to floods last year.

According to an of State Disaster Management Authority, during the pre-monsoon period, unlike previous years, there was no major flood in Assam.

"However, emergency response teams in all the flood-prone districts have been put on alert to tackle possible floods this year. Currently, 14 units of emergency response teams are ready to deploy to assist people during floods," the told IANS refusing to disclose his identity.

personnel and the have also started flood-preparedness exercises in different northeastern states.

(Sujit Chakraborty can be contacted at sujit.c@ians.in)

--IANS

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First Published: Sat, June 02 2018. 11:50 IST