El Niño & the Indian Monsoon Why India Goes Dry
A warm patch of ocean thousands of kilometres away in the Pacific can decide whether India's farms thrive or wither. In 2026, with a developing El Niño and a weak monsoon forecast, that link is back in the headlines. Here's the full story — explained from the basics, with the latest data.
El Niño is the unusual warming of the central and eastern Pacific Ocean. It disturbs global wind patterns and is usually linked to a weaker Indian monsoon and drought. In 2026, the IMD has forecast a below-normal monsoon (~90% of the long-period average) as El Niño develops, while the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) — which can soften El Niño's blow — is currently neutral. The result: fears for Kharif and Rabi crops, low reservoirs (just 26% full), and risks to the rural economy, drinking water, and hydropower.
India is entering the most critical phase of its rainy season — and the mood is anxious. A developing El Niño, an unhelpful Indian Ocean, and a poor early monsoon have raised the spectre of drought. Because farming, water, power, food prices and the wider economy all hinge on the rains, this is one of the most important topics an aspirant can master. Let's build it up from the very basics.
The former President Pranab Mukherjee once called the monsoon "India's real finance minister" — because no budget, however bold, can fully offset a failed rainy season in a country where so many livelihoods still rise and fall with the rain. — Legacy IAS Faculty
Basics First — What Is the Indian Monsoon?
The monsoon is a seasonal reversal of winds that brings most of India's yearly rain. The Southwest (summer) Monsoon runs roughly June to September and delivers about 70-75% of India's annual rainfall. Think of it as the country's yearly "water deposit" — filling reservoirs, recharging groundwater, and watering crops. The benchmark for "normal" rain is the Long Period Average (LPA), the 50-year average seasonal rainfall.
India has two main cropping seasons. Kharif (summer) crops — like paddy, maize, cotton, soybean — are sown with the monsoon (June-July) and harvested in autumn; they depend directly on the rains. Rabi (winter) crops — like wheat, mustard, gram — are sown Nov-Feb and rely on soil moisture and reservoir water left behind by the monsoon. So a weak monsoon hurts both seasons — first Kharif directly, then Rabi indirectly.
What Is El Niño? (And La Niña & ENSO)
Here's the heart of it, simply. The Pacific Ocean has a natural "see-saw" of warm and cool phases called the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). It has three states:
El Niño (Warm)
The central & eastern Pacific becomes warmer than usual. Generally linked to a weak Indian monsoon and harsher summers.
La Niña (Cool)
The same region becomes cooler than usual. Generally linked to a good/strong monsoon in India.
Neutral
Neither warm nor cool — ocean temperatures are near average.
Normally, trade winds push warm water and rain-making clouds westward toward Indonesia and the Indian Ocean — good news for India. During El Niño, this warm water and rainfall shifts eastward toward the central Pacific instead. The rain-making engine effectively "moves away" from the Indian region, so the monsoon tends to weaken. El Niño develops thousands of kilometres away — yet it reshapes weather across the globe, including India's rains, crop yields, food prices and growth.
Figure: In a normal year the warm water & rain sit in the west (good for India); during El Niño they shift east, drying out the Indian monsoon.
What Is the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD)?
The IOD is like a smaller see-saw, but in the Indian Ocean. It's the difference in sea-surface temperature between the western and eastern tropical Indian Ocean:
| IOD Phase | What Happens | Effect on Monsoon |
|---|---|---|
| Positive IOD | Western Indian Ocean warmer than the east. | Strengthens monsoon winds; can offset El Niño. |
| Negative IOD | Eastern Indian Ocean warmer than the west. | Generally weakens the monsoon. |
| Neutral IOD | Little temperature difference. | No cushioning effect either way. |
A positive IOD can act as a shock-absorber, softening the rain-suppressing impact of El Niño — exactly what happened in 2023, when a positive IOD helped India get near-normal rain despite an El Niño year. The worry in 2026 is that the IOD is currently neutral (forecast to turn positive only late in the season), so for the critical months there may be no cushion against El Niño.
Figure: A positive IOD (warm western Indian Ocean) pushes moisture toward India and softens El Niño; a negative IOD does the opposite.
The 2026 Situation — Why India Is Worried
Putting it together, here's the current picture for 2026:
Below-Normal Forecast
The IMD forecasts rainfall around 90% of LPA, with a ~60% chance of a deficient season. The monsoon also reached Kerala a few days late (4 June).
El Niño Developing
A strengthening El Niño is expected through the monsoon — with high odds it continues into the 2026-27 winter.
No IOD Cushion (Yet)
The IOD is neutral during the critical phase, so there's little to offset El Niño's drying effect.
Reservoirs Running Low
166 key reservoirs (monitored by the Central Water Commission) are at just 26% of capacity — a worrying buffer.
The agriculture ministry has mapped 315 districts (40% of all districts) as facing higher risk of low rainfall and irrigation shortage — mostly across 12 states (Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Bihar, Jharkhand, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Odisha). Much of India's rain-fed "monsoon core zone" — central India, where farming depends mainly on seasonal rain — has seen the biggest early deficits.
El Niño vs the Monsoon — A Quick History
The link is strong but not absolute — other factors (like the IOD) can change the outcome. The record shows why:
| Year | What Happened |
|---|---|
| 2002, 2004, 2009 | El Niño years that cut key Kharif crops (paddy, maize) by over 10% in dozens of districts (ICAR study). |
| 2015-16 | A severe ("super") El Niño caused widespread drought; foodgrain output fell ~5%. |
| 2023 | An El Niño year — but a positive IOD cushioned it, giving near-normal rain and even record foodgrains. |
| 2026 | El Niño developing with a neutral IOD for the critical phase — hence the heightened drought worry. |
El Niño raises the probability of a weak monsoon — it doesn't guarantee one. The final outcome depends on the combination of ENSO, the IOD, and other factors (like Eurasian snow cover). This is why forecasting the monsoon is so genuinely difficult.
The Ripple Effects — Why It's Everyone's Problem
A weak monsoon isn't just a farmer's worry — it cascades through the whole economy:
Food & Farms
Lower Kharif and Rabi output, hitting foodgrain supply and pushing up food inflation — worsened by rising input costs (fertiliser, diesel).
Rural Economy
Distress in farming dampens rural incomes and demand, which drags on the wider economy.
Drinking Water
Low reservoirs threaten drinking-water supply, especially in big cities that depend on them directly.
Hydropower
Many reservoirs feed hydro plants — so less water also means less power, a "double whammy" for the energy sector.
What Can Be Done — Solutions & Adaptation
Weather-Based Advisory
Advanced, location-specific agro-advisory helps farmers decide what and when to sow.
Efficient Water Use
Micro-irrigation (drip/sprinkler), watershed management, and better reservoir use stretch scarce water.
Drought-Tolerant Crops
Hardy, short-duration and drought-resistant varieties reduce losses in dry years.
Crop Diversification
Shifting from water-guzzling paddy & sugarcane to millets & pulses saves water and builds resilience.
India has expanded irrigation, but it isn't yet "drought-proofed." The real answer is intensely location-specific adaptation — combining better forecasts, water efficiency, resilient crops, and diversification — so that a single warm patch in the Pacific can no longer hold the entire rural economy hostage.
Key Terms — Quick Glossary
| Term | Simple Meaning |
|---|---|
| Monsoon (SW) | June-Sept seasonal rains giving ~70-75% of India's annual rainfall. |
| LPA | Long Period Average — the benchmark for "normal" monsoon rainfall. |
| ENSO | El Niño-Southern Oscillation — the Pacific's warm/cool/neutral cycle. |
| El Niño / La Niña | Warm phase (weak monsoon) / cool phase (good monsoon) of ENSO. |
| IOD | Indian Ocean Dipole — temperature see-saw that can offset El Niño. |
| Kharif / Rabi | Summer (monsoon-sown) crops / winter crops. |
| Monsoon core zone | Rain-fed central India most dependent on seasonal rain. |
| Live storage | Usable water currently held in reservoirs. |
UPSC Prelims 2026-Standard MCQs
Q1. With reference to the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), consider the following statements:
2. El Niño is generally associated with below-normal monsoon rainfall in India.
3. La Niña is the warm phase of ENSO.
(a) Only one
(b) Only two
(c) All three
(d) None
Show Answer
Q2. With reference to the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), consider the following statements:
2. A positive IOD can offset the rainfall-suppressing impact of El Niño.
3. The IOD has no influence on the Indian monsoon.
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Show Answer
Q3. Consider the following statements about cropping seasons in India:
2. Paddy and maize are examples of Kharif crops.
3. Wheat is a Kharif crop.
(a) Only one
(b) Only two
(c) All three
(d) None
Show Answer
Q4. Consider the following statements:
2. The "monsoon core zone" is mainly the rain-fed region of central India.
3. India's reservoirs are monitored by the Central Water Commission (CWC).
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Show Answer
Probable UPSC Mains Question
Q (GS-I / GS-III, 15 marks). "Though it originates in the Pacific Ocean, El Niño has a profound bearing on India's monsoon, agriculture and economy." Discuss, and suggest measures to make Indian agriculture more resilient to monsoon variability.
Show Approach
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. What is El Niño in simple words?
El Niño is a natural climate pattern in which the surface waters of the central and eastern Pacific Ocean become warmer than usual. This warming disturbs global wind and rainfall patterns and is generally linked to a weaker monsoon and drier conditions in India.
Q2. How does El Niño affect the Indian monsoon?
Normally, winds carry warm water and rain-making clouds westward toward the Indian region. During El Niño, this shifts eastward toward the central Pacific, so the rain "engine" moves away from India — typically weakening the monsoon and raising the risk of drought, though the effect is not guaranteed.
Q3. What is the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), and why does it matter?
The IOD is the sea-surface temperature difference between the western and eastern tropical Indian Ocean. A positive IOD (warmer west) can strengthen monsoon winds and offset El Niño's drying effect — as it did in 2023. In 2026, the IOD is neutral for the critical phase, so there's little cushion.
Q4. Why is the 2026 monsoon a concern?
The IMD has forecast below-normal rainfall (~90% of LPA) as El Niño develops, the IOD is neutral, the monsoon began late, and reservoirs are only ~26% full — together raising the risk of a drought year that could hurt crops, water supply, hydropower and the rural economy.
Q5. Does El Niño always cause drought in India?
No. El Niño increases the probability of a weak monsoon but doesn't guarantee drought. The outcome depends on the combination of ENSO, the IOD, and other factors — which is why 2023 (an El Niño year) still saw near-normal rainfall.
Key Takeaways
- The monsoon (June-Sept) gives ~70-75% of India's rain and decides Kharif (and indirectly Rabi) crops — hence its nickname, India's "real finance minister."
- El Niño (warm Pacific, part of ENSO) generally weakens the monsoon; La Niña (cool phase) generally strengthens it.
- The IOD is the Indian Ocean's cushion — a positive IOD can offset El Niño (as in 2023); in 2026 it's neutral, so little protection.
- 2026 worry: IMD forecasts ~90% of LPA, El Niño developing, late monsoon onset, and reservoirs at just 26% — raising drought risk.
- Ripple effects: hits Kharif & Rabi crops, food inflation, the rural economy, drinking water, and hydropower (a "double whammy").
- The fix: weather-based advisory, micro-irrigation, drought-tolerant crops, and a shift to millets & pulses — i.e., location-specific adaptation.
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