Popular Articles

Truck prices moving north
Commercial vehicle makers including Tata Motors, Volvo and Ashok Leyland have hiked or are considering raising prices of trucks by up to four per cent this month to offset rising input costs, even as the segment saw return of demand.

Evidence of Krishna
- T N Ninan: Failing capitalism">T N Ninan: Failing capitalism - BJP, JD(S) win two seats each in bypolls - IT/ITeS firms operating income grows 15% - Non-basmati export ban hits organic farmers in Kerala - IDBI Bank yet to begin Rs 13,000 cr syndication for RPower - BHEL Trichy eyes Rs 10,000 cr turnover

News of the day

Arms donors
The echo of India’s controversial Rs 10,000-crore Barak surface-to-air missile deal with Israel is being heard in faraway London. According to a leading London newspaper, “One of the Liberal Democrats’ most generous donors has been accused of accepting tens of millions of pounds in kickbacks from an arms deal between an Israeli company and the Indian Government …” The newspaper quotes Indian sources to say the payments were disguised as ‘business charges’ since India officially prohibits the use of middlemen in defence deals.
Business Opportunities

Not chasing the monsoon

Business Standard / New Delhi October 25, 2009, 0:31 IST The proposed move by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) to issue only monthly rainfall predictions, instead of the long-range monsoon forecast for the entire four-month (June to September) monsoon season, will disappoint many monsoon watchers, even though it makes sense for several reasons. Given the track record of seasonal monsoon projections, despite the growing sophistication of the data collection and data processing technology, not offering a misleading forecast may be a good idea. US markets end in the green Besides, putting out an estimate of the total quantum of rainfall (by averaging all-India rainfall to a single number), without indicating its spread in terms of time and space, is of little use for agriculture, reservoir water management or any other purpose. The credibility of the IMD’s predictions has taken a beating because of its poor record of accuracy in recent years. The only brief period when the IMD got its projections more or less right was between 1988 and 1999 when its forecasts were computed with the 16 parameters-based power regression model developed by a team of scientists led by Dr VK Gowarikar, originally of the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) and later Secretary of the Department of Science and Technology. This model, too, began faltering subsequently and could not forewarn the near 19 per cent rainfall deficiency in 2002. It was ultimately given up after it totally failed to foresee the severe drought of 2004. The new models tried out since then have generally failed to offer reliable forecasts. This year’s fiasco in monsoon forecasting was the worst of all. This decline in accuracy of prediction stands in contrast to the improvement in information network, technology and data processing systems. Huge investments have been made in Doppler weather radars, meteorological satellites and high speed data communication and computing wherewithal. The IMD now has in place a satellite-based dense network of automatic rain gauge stations and weather data collecting systems for surface and upper atmosphere as well as oceans. What is wanting is a suitable model — statistical or dynamical — for gainfully utilising this data for foreseeing the performance of the monsoon. While the weather forecasting centres in developed countries switched over to dynamical weather prediction models (based on mathematical equations simulating the physics of the global atmosphere) in the 1990s, Indian meteorologists have stuck to the statistical models (based on empirical statistical formulations) since the 1920s. These models are incapable of generating forecasts of higher spatial and temporal resolutions which the users of these forecasts, including agriculturalists, need. While it is true that the simulation of year-to-year variation of a weather system as complex as the monsoon is a challenging task, but this challenge has to be met as it is a prerequisite for the success of any forecasting model, more so for dynamical models. While IMD will no doubt work at improving its capabilities, there may be a case for reaching out globally for technical assistance and support.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):