The southwest monsoon is likely to set over Kerala on June 5, four days behind schedule, the India Meteorological Department said in New Delhi on Thursday.
The forecast comes with an error of plus or minus four days. The normal date of onset of monsoon over the state is June 1.
Last year as against the forecast of arrival of monsoon on June 3, the rains had actually arrived in Kerala on June 1.
A year earlier, the monsoon had arrived on June 5.
The southwest monsoon is crucial for the farming community which heavily depends on the rainfall, particularly for kharif crops such as rice, soyabean, cotton and maize.
The country’s 60 per cent farm land is rain-fed.
The Met department had earlier said that the country could see below normal rainfall this year at 95 per cent rainfall because of the El-Nino effect which is generally associated with the warming of ocean water.
In a statement on Thursday, the Met department said the monsoon is likely to advance over Andaman Sea in the next three days as low-level cross equatorial monsoon flow has started appearing over south of Andaman Sea and adjoining south Bay of Bengal.
During the last few days, it said considerable increase in the rainfall activity over the Bay of Bengal has also been observed.
The cross equatorial flow is likely to strengthen and deepen, which in turn would lead to further increase in the rainfall activity over the area.
“It is likely to set over Kerala on June 5, with a model error of plus or minus 4 days”, the IMD said.