Climate contradiction: Stronger monsoons bring more rain to northwest India

This research highlights the complex and sometimes contradictory ways climate change impacts regional weather patterns. Further investigation is crucial to improve rainfall predictions and inform adaptation strategies in vulnerable regions like northwest India.

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New research from the University of Southampton reveals a climate change contradiction: stronger monsoon winds are bringing significantly more rainfall to typically semi-arid regions of northwest India.

The study, led by Ligin Joseph, a postgraduate researcher in Ocean and Earth Science at the University of Southampton, found a 40 percent increase in summer monsoon rainfall over northwest India in recent years, compared to the 1980s. This challenges the widely held belief that climate change intensifies existing precipitation patterns, making dry regions drier and wet regions wetter.

Ligin Joseph commented: 'The 40 percent increase in summer monsoon rains came as a surprise to us. It contradicts the widely accepted narrative that global warming is leading to dry regions becoming drier and wet regions wetter. Here, we have the opposite.'

The research team linked this unexpected phenomenon to stronger monsoon winds, driven by the rapid warming of the Indian Ocean and enhanced Pacific Ocean trade winds—both heavily influenced by climate change. These stronger winds increase evaporation over the Indian Ocean, resulting in more moisture being carried from the Arabian Sea to northwest India.

The Indian Meteorological Department recently recorded above-normal rainfall in northwest India, including states like Delhi, Gujarat, and Rajasthan, during the last monsoon season.

The study’s findings have significant implications for future rainfall predictions in India. The Clausius-Clapeyron relation indicates that the water-holding capacity of the atmosphere increases by seven percent per degree of global warming.

'Our findings suggest that future changes in India’s precipitation patterns will largely depend on shifts in monsoon atmospheric circulation,' Joseph concluded.

This research underscores the complex and sometimes contradictory ways climate change impacts regional weather patterns. Further investigation is essential to improve rainfall predictions and inform adaptation strategies in vulnerable regions like northwest India."