Central part of India and adjacent North Peninsular India - mainly Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, some parts of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana will receive good rainfall from tomorrow (24th July 2019) as the monsoon is set to intensify in the region.
On the other hand, from Saturday onwards, the distribution & intensity of the continuing rainfall over Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Coastal & South Interior Karnataka may wind down gradually, according to the India Met Department (IMD).
Fairly widespread rainfall is likely over the north West Coast, North-West & Central India, exterior South-East Peninsula (mainly Tamil Nadu) where it will be isolated. The rain scarcity, which has touched a fresh low of 19% despite the monsoon surge in the South, can look up once the fresh spell gets going over Central India & neighboring North Peninsula.
Currently, the major rainfall activity has been mainly confined to south peninsular India & northeast India. Nevertheless, the IMD maintained that widespread rainfall with very heavy spells will continue over the southern states of Karnataka, Kerala and adjoining Ghat districts of Tamil Nadu in the next 2 days owing to strong convergence of monsoon westerlies would continue over South India.
Presence of monsoon trough across Sub-Himalayan West Bengal & Assam towards Nagaland is expected to bring widespread rain with isolated heavy to very heavy falls over Bengal, Assam, Sikkim, Meghalaya & Arunachal Pradesh in next two days.
Coming towards North India, parts of Delhi, Haryana, Chandigarh and West Uttar Pradesh are also likely to observe significant increase in the rainfall activity, along with few parts of Maharashtra, Rajasthan, and Goa.
The last 24 hours ending on Monday (22nd July 2019) morning witnessed rain and thundershowers over many North-Eastern States, hills of Bengal, Sikkim, Saurashtra, Konkan, Coastal Karnataka, Kerala, Lakshadweep, Gujarat, Madhya Maharashtra & North Interior Karnataka.