India expects 43% weaker monsoon amid El Niรฑo
India faces potential drought from a strong El Niรฑo likely weakening monsoon rains by 43%, risking crop failures, rising food prices, and water shortages. Nearly half of India's farmland relying on mo
Indiaโs farmers are bracing for a brutal drought as a strong El Nino threatens to slash monsoon rains this summer, potentially devastating crops, driv
Read Full Story at DW World โWhy This Matters
As India's monsoon season approaches, the specter of El Niรฑoโcorrelated with suppressed rainfall and prolonged dry spellsโthreatens to unravel years of agricultural and economic stability. With nearly half of the country's farmland dependent on monsoon rains, a severe shortfall could trigger cascading effects on food security, inflation, and rural incomes, disproportionately impacting smallholder farmers who form the backbone of India's economy.
Background Context
India's vulnerability to El Niรฑo is not new; the 2015-16 episode triggered one of the worst droughts in decades, leading to a 14% decline in kharif crop output. However, this year's looming El Niรฑo coincides with a period of heightened geopolitical tensions over water resources, including disputes with neighboring nations over transboundary river flows and internal conflicts over groundwater depletion.
What Happens Next
Policymakers face a critical window to activate contingency plans, such as expanding irrigation coverage or accelerating food stockpile replenishment, before the monsoon enters its peak phase. Meanwhile, global commodity markets will likely react to India's potential import surge for staples like edible oils and pulses, while domestic prices could rise ahead of key state elections, testing the government's ability to manage public sentiment.
Bigger Picture
This crisis underscores the accelerating intersection of climate variability and economic fragility in agrarian societies. As El Niรฑo events become more frequent due to climate change, India's reliance on monsoon-dependent agriculture may force a reckoning with long-overdue reforms in water management, crop diversification, and rural resilience strategies.

