Guide On travel
India’s shape, unusual topography, and geographical
position give it a diverse climate. Most of India
has a tropical or subtropical climate, with little
variation in temperature between seasons. The
northern plains, however, have a greater
temperature range, with cooler winters and hotter
summers. The mountain areas have cold winters and
cool summers. As elevations increase sharply in the
mountains, climate type can change from subtropical
to polar within a few miles.
India’s seasonal cycle includes three main phases:
the cool, dry winter from October to March; the
hot, dry summer from April to June; and the
southwest monsoon season of warm, torrential rains
from mid-June to September. India’s winter season
brings cold temperatures to the mountain slopes and
northern plains; temperatures in the Thar Desert
reach freezing at night. Farther south,
temperatures are mild. Average daily temperatures
in January range from 13° to 27°C (55° to 81°F) in
the northeastern city of Kolkata (formerly
Calcutta); from 8° to 21°C (46° to 70°F) in the
north central city of New Delhi; from 19° to 30°C
(67° to 85°F) in the west central coast city of
Mumbai (formerly Bombay); and from 19° to 29°C (67°
to 85°F) in the vicinity of Chennai (formerly
Madras) on the southeastern coast. Dry weather
generally accompanies the cool winter season,
although severe storms sometimes traverse the
country, yielding slight precipitation on the
northern plains and heavy snowfall in the Himalayas.
India’s hot and dry season reaches its most
oppressive stage during May, when temperatures as
high as 49°C (120°F) are commonly recorded in the
northern plains. Temperatures in the southern
peninsula are somewhat lower, averaging 35° to 40°C
(95° to 104°F). At higher altitudes, as in the
Western Ghats and the Himalayas, temperatures are
considerably cooler.
The intense heat breaks when the summer monsoon
season arrives in June. For most of the year the
monsoons, or seasonal winds, blow from the
northeast. In the summer months, however, they
begin to blow from the southwest, absorbing
moisture as they cross the Indian Ocean. This warm,
moist air creates heavy rains as it rises over the
Indian Peninsula and is finally forced up the
slopes of the Himalayas. The rains start in early
June on a strip of coast lying between the Arabian
Sea and the foot of the Western Ghats. A second
“arm” of the monsoon starts from the Bay of Bengal
in the northeast and gradually extends up the
Gangetic Plain, where it meets the Arabian Sea
“arm” in the Delhi region around July 1. In July
the average daily temperature range is 26° to 32°C
(79° to 89°F) in Kolkata; 27° to 35°C (80° to 94°F)
in New Delhi; 25° to 30°C (78° to 86°F) in Mumbai;
and 26° to 36°C (79° to 96°F) in Chennai.
The monsoon season is critical to India. Farming
depends heavily on the monsoon, even though
artificial sources of irrigation are also commonly
used. The economy prospers when the monsoon season
is normal and plummets when it is not. In the past
a failure of the monsoon has brought abnormally low
rains in crucial food-growing regions, leading to
famine. A failed monsoon season in the dryland
areas of the Deccan Plateau can mean poor or
nonexistent harvests for that year’s crop. In the
Gangetic Plain, the groundwater needed for
irrigating the winter crop depends on the monsoon
for replenishing. However, an excessive monsoon may
also spell disaster, especially in the Gangetic
Plain of eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihār, where
rivers can flood and wash away homes and fields.
The average annual rainfall for India as a whole is
1,250 mm (49 in). The heaviest rainfall occurs
along the Western Ghats, often more than 3,175 mm
(125 in), and on the slopes of the eastern
Himalayas and the Khāsi Hills (of Meghalaya), where
the town of Cherrapunji receives 10,900 mm (430 in)
annually. The entire northeast region averages more
than 2,000 mm (80 in) annually, with Jharkhand,
Orissa, and the Bengal region receiving nearly as
much. Rain and snow fall in abundance on the entire
Himalayan range. New Delhi receives an annual
average of 800 to 1,000 mm (32 to 40 in) of rain,
and the broad swath of land extending to the south,
much of it in the rain shadow of the Western Ghats,
receives about the same or a little more.
Guide On travel