The Taj Lake Palace in Udaipur, Rajasthan, India. It is a rainy day and there are dark clouds surrounding the hills in the distance.

Increasing rainfall reveals climate change contradiction

Published: 27 February 2025

Research has found that stronger monsoon winds have contributed to a 鈥渟urprising鈥 40% increase in summer monsoon rainfall over Northwest India 鈥 a typically semi-arid region 鈥 in the last decade, compared to the 1980s.

Dry regions becoming wetter

鈥淭he 40% increase came as a surprise to us, as it contradicts the widely accepted narrative that global warming is leading to dry regions becoming drier and wet regions becoming wetter. Here, we have the opposite,鈥 says Ligin Joseph鈥, postgraduate researcher in ocean and Earth science. Ligin is also the lead author of the highlighting the findings.

罢丑别鈥痳ecorded above-normal rainfall in Northwest India, including the states of Delhi, Gujarat and Rajasthan, during the latest monsoon season.

A busy road in South Delhi, India at night. It is raining and there are multiple cars and motorbikes on the road.
States including Delhi, pictured, as well as Gujarat and Rajasthan recorded above-normal rainfall during the latest monsoon season.

Strong monsoon winds

The research team, which included collaborators at the鈥痑苍诲 , has linked this unexpected phenomenon to stronger monsoon winds causing more evaporation over the Indian Ocean.

This has led in turn to an increase in moisture being carried from the Arabian Sea, in the northern Indian Ocean, to Northwest India 鈥 a typically semi-arid region.

Our study attributes the strengthening of the monsoon winds to the rapid warming of the Indian Ocean and the enhanced Pacific Ocean trade winds 鈥 both of which are heavily fed by climate change and global warming.

Ligin Joseph, PhD Ocean and Climate Physics

The study鈥檚 findings may impact future rainfall predictions in India. 罢丑别鈥 states that the water-holding capacity of the air increases by 7% per degree of global warming.

鈥淥ur findings suggest that future changes in India鈥檚 precipitation patterns will largely hinge on shifts in monsoon atmospheric circulation,鈥 concludes Ligin.

Related publications

Ligin Joseph, Nikolaos Skliris, Dipanjan Dey, Robert Marsh & Joel Hirschi, 2024, Geophysical Research Letters, 51(16)
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Type: article