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El Niño Hangover: India’s Next Monsoon Is Still Dancing To Last Year’s Heat

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The monsoon is more than weather; it’s India’s economic heartbeat. A season distorted by a fading El Niño can rattle everything from GDP growth to the cost of vegetables.

How a Pacific Current Rewires India’s Rains

How a Pacific Current Rewires India’s Rains

The 2024–25 El Niño is officially fading, yet India’s atmosphere is still under its spell. This is not just leftover warm water; it’s an aftershock that warps wind, moisture and forecasts. Meteorologists call it the “El Niño hangover,” and it’s rewriting expectations for the coming monsoon.

El Niño occurs when Pacific trade winds weaken and warm surface water sloshes east, disrupting global weather. But once the surface cools, the deep ocean keeps the memory alive.

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  • Subsurface Heat: Layers down to 300 metres remain warmer than normal, feeding moisture into the air.
  • Atmospheric Inertia: Jet streams and the Walker circulation, global conveyor belts for heat and rain, need months to return to pre-El Niño patterns.

Because these processes run on different clocks, the Pacific can look “neutral” while still bending the planet’s weather.

India’s Climate Crossroads

As of September 2025, ENSO readings hover in the neutral zone, but neutral isn’t normal. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) projects a slightly above-average monsoon, about 105 percent of the long-period average, yet admits the confidence range is unusually wide.

Forecast models still detect a 60-plus percent chance of La Niña emerging late this year, which could mean a colder winter and possible excess rain next season.

Farmers, planners and city engineers are left to second-guess: will sowing dates slip again, will flash floods strike when drains are least ready, and will reservoirs fill in time for power generation?

How the Hangover Twists Rainfall

Delayed or Erratic Onset

Residual warmth weakens the usual pressure gradient that drives the southwest monsoon, so the first rains may arrive late or sputter in fits.

Bursts Instead of Balance

Research shows that post-El Niño years often swing between dry spells and violent cloudbursts. Seasonal totals might look “normal,” but the rain comes in destructive pulses.

Collisions with Other Drivers

A positive Indian Ocean Dipole or warm Arabian Sea can amplify or counteract the fading El Niño. These overlapping signals create local surprises: one district floods while a neighbour stays parched.

Model Uncertainty

Seasonal models depend on starting conditions. If they’re initialized while the ocean still hides extra heat, they may overshoot or undershoot rainfall by wide margins.

Real-World Consequences

Agriculture feels the first hit. A farmer planting rice or pulses on a “normal” forecast could face dry soil during germination, then sudden deluges that drown maturing crops. Crop-insurance claims rise, food prices wobble, and rural incomes shrink.

Urban India isn’t spared. Cities from Bengaluru to Mumbai must design drainage and reservoirs for a moving target. A month of drizzle can lull authorities, only to be followed by a week of floods that overwhelm infrastructure.

Hydropower output and groundwater recharge depend on evenly spread rain. An El Niño hangover means reservoirs may not refill when expected, disrupting electricity supply and pushing up power costs.

Why the Forecast Is So Tricky

The Pacific’s hidden heat drains slowly, so models must guess how quickly trade winds and sea-surface temperatures will revert. A lag of even two weeks can flip India’s rainfall pattern. Add climate change, warmer air holds more moisture and fuels extremes and the baseline itself keeps shifting.

Scientists have improved seasonal forecasting with machine-learning techniques and higher-resolution ocean models, yet the “spring predictability barrier” still haunts ENSO predictions, especially in transitional years like this one.

Preparing for a Wobbly Monsoon

Adaptation now matters as much as prediction.

  • Flexible Sowing Windows: Agricultural advisories urge farmers to keep seed stocks for staggered planting.
  • Reservoir Management: Water boards are using near-real-time satellite data to time releases and store surges from sudden cloudbursts.
  • City Infrastructure: Urban planners are reinforcing storm drains and identifying flash-flood hotspots using AI-driven rainfall mapping.

These steps can’t remove uncertainty, but they narrow the damage when the atmosphere decides to surprise.

The Bigger Picture

El Niño hangovers are not new, but climate change is making them sharper. Warmer oceans mean each event starts from a hotter baseline, and every extra 0.1 °C in sea-surface temperature loads the dice toward heavier downpours and longer dry spells. For India, where half the population still depends on rain-fed agriculture, that means the difference between a bumper harvest and a food-price spike can hinge on a Pacific current thousands of kilometres away.

The monsoon is more than weather; it’s India’s economic heartbeat. A season distorted by a fading El Niño can rattle everything from GDP growth to the cost of vegetables in a street market.

The lesson is clear: even when El Niño officially ends, its ghost remains. Forecasts must speak in ranges, planners must prepare for extremes, and farmers must sow with both hope and caution.

About the Author

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News Desk

The News Desk is a team of passionate editors and writers who break and analyse the most important events unfolding in India and abroad. From live updates to exclusive reports to in-depth explainers, the Desk d…Read More

The News Desk is a team of passionate editors and writers who break and analyse the most important events unfolding in India and abroad. From live updates to exclusive reports to in-depth explainers, the Desk d… Read More

News explainers El Niño Hangover: India’s Next Monsoon Is Still Dancing To Last Year’s Heat
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