Unveiling the Mystery of India’s 10% Coefficient of Variation in
Monsoon Rainfall: Insights from Moisture Dynamics
Abstract
10% coefficient of variation (COV) in All India Monsoon Rainfall (AIMR)
assumes paramount importance as the government classifies years with
AIMR above 110% as surplus and below 90% as deficit, shaping critical
decisions. While most Indian regions exhibit a 20-40% COV for
grid-level monsoon rainfall, the mystery surrounding AIMR’s 10% COV
persists. An examination of 40 years of gridded monsoon rainfall data
exposes the negative covariance between Central India (CI) and Northeast
India (NE) constraining the COV of AIMR to approximately 10%. Utilizing
Lagrangian backtracking of moisture, we found that during CI’s deficit
rainfall years, NE experiences surplus with 61.69% moisture from
terrestrial sources. In CI’s surplus years, major fraction of the
moisture supply from ocean is confined to CI, resulting in NE facing
deficit rainfall. Our findings emphasize the non-intuitive processes
leading to the 10% COV in AIMR cautioning against relying on this value
for scientific studies or planning.