...
Skip to content

Southwest Monsoon Set to Hit Andaman Sea This Week, Days Ahead of Schedule

Govt in Lok Sabha highlights El Niño impact on monsoon in India

The India Meteorological Department issued its signal on Tuesday in its daily national weather bulletin. “Conditions are becoming favourable for onset of southwest monsoon likely over parts of south Bay of Bengal, Andaman Sea and Andaman and Nicobar Islands towards the end of this week,” the department stated.

The low-pressure area over the southwest Bay of Bengal, first identified on Monday, remained active on Tuesday. The IMD said the associated cyclonic circulation extends up to 4.5 kilometres above mean sea level and will intensify further over the next 48 hours.

How Early Is It?

The climatological normal date for monsoon onset over the Andaman Sea region is around May 22. An arrival by the end of this week would place the onset five to six days ahead of schedule.

Last year, in 2025, the monsoon reached the Andaman Sea on May 13. This year’s projected arrival falls within a similar window, continuing a pattern of early onset that forecasters have observed in recent seasons.

The monsoon then advances westward toward mainland India. Its arrival over Kerala on June 1 is the date that formally marks the start of the four-month season. That date remains the national benchmark.

An early arrival over the Andaman Sea does not guarantee an early onset over Kerala, nor does it predict how much rain the country will receive. The IMD has consistently noted that the timing of the initial onset has no direct link to the monsoon’s subsequent progress or the total quantum of seasonal rainfall.

The southwest monsoon delivers over 70 per cent of India’s annual rainfall during the June to September period. The country’s average seasonal rainfall stands at approximately 880 millimetres. What matters for agriculture, reservoirs, and groundwater recharge is not when the monsoon begins, but how consistently and widely it delivers rainfall through its four-month course.

Weather System Driving the Early Onset

The trigger for this week’s expected onset is the low-pressure area sitting over the southwest Bay of Bengal. Such systems draw in moisture-laden winds from the Indian Ocean and create the atmospheric conditions that allow the monsoon to advance northward and westward.

The IMD noted that a trough in the easterlies runs from the centre of this low-pressure area through to Marathwada in the lower troposphere. This pattern, combined with the strengthening cyclonic circulation, is what forecasters are reading as a favourable signal.

A fresh Western Disturbance is also expected to affect northwest India from May 15, adding a secondary weather driver to an already active national weather picture.

Once the monsoon establishes itself over the Andaman Sea, forecasters will track its northward advance toward the Bay of Bengal and then westward toward the Kerala coast. The IMD will issue further bulletins as the system develops.

Support Us To Sustain Independent Environmental Journalism In India.


Keep Reading

Highway Halt Puts Kashmir’s Fruit Economy at Risk

Railway line expansion plan put Kashmir’s apple orchards at risk

Warmer winters in Kashmir raise concerns over apple and crop yields


Stay Connected With Ground Report For Underreported Environmental Stories.

Author

Support Ground Report to keep independent environmental journalism alive in India

We do deep on-ground reports on environmental, and related issues from the margins of India, with a particular focus on Madhya Pradesh, to inspire relevant interventions and solutions. 

We believe climate change should be the basis of current discourse, and our stories attempt to reflect the same.

Connect With Us

Send your feedback at greport2018@gmail.com

Newsletter

Subscribe our weekly free newsletter on Substack to get tailored content directly to your inbox.

When you pay, you ensure that we are able to produce on-ground underreported environmental stories and keep them free-to-read for those who can’t pay. In exchange, you get exclusive benefits.

Your support amplifies voices too often overlooked, thank you for being part of the movement.

EXPLORE MORE

LATEST

mORE GROUND REPORTS

Environment stories from the margins