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  • 29
    Sep
    2011
    2:20pm, EDT

    Pretty photo of bad monsoon flooding in India

    Kevin Frayer / AP

    Flood-affected boys row a makeshift banana raft on their way to a marooned community near Patamundi, about 75 miles north of Bhubaneshwar, India, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2011.

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    Sometimes natural disasters make pretty pictures.

    More news about the flooding that had killed more than 350 people so far.  Watch NBC's Amna Nawaz's report below.

    NBC's Amna Nawaz toured Pakistan's flooded southern province of Sindh in a helicopter.  The area is still reeling from last year's epic floods, and has been swamped by monsoon rains.        

    Comment

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  • 18
    Sep
    2011
    10:37am, EDT

    Nicolas Asfouri / AFP - Getty Images

    Heavy rain falls over the city of Bangkok at sunset during the monsoon season on Sept. 18. The East Asian monsoon is a monsoonal flow that carries moist air from the Indian Ocean and Pacific Ocean to East Asia. It affects approximately one-third of the global population, influencing the climate of Japan, the Koreas, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, and much of mainland China.

    Heavy rains fall over Bangkok

    .

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  • 17
    Aug
    2011
    2:43pm, EDT

    Monsoon rains force Pakistanis from homes

    By Rich Shulman

    Barely a year after major flooding, Pakistanis in Sindh province are fleeing their homes after monsoon rains.

    Related: One year on, a 5 year old boy recalls Pakistan flood

    Pervez Masih / AP

    Flood affected women jostle for food distributed in Tando Mohammad Khan, near Hyderabad in Pakistan's Sindh province on Wednesday, Aug. 17. According to local officials thousands of people from many villages were displaced by the flood.

    Pervez Masih / AP

    Pakistani villagers wade their to way to safe places as their houses are flooded as a result of torrential monsoon rains over a few days in Tando Mohammad Khan, near Hyderabad in Pakistan's Sindh province on Wednesday, Aug. 17. According to local officials thousands of people from many villages were displaced by the flood.

     

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  • 8
    Aug
    2011
    11:06am, EDT

    Manish Swarup / AP

    Commuters leave after days work as monsoon clouds gathered over New Delhi, India, on Monday, Aug. 8.

    Monsoon clouds hover over New Delhi, India

    According to the AP, India is affected by annual monsoon rains from June to September. See more weather-related images on PhotoBlog here.

    1 comment

    una buena oportunidad

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    Explore related topics: weather, india, new-delhi, clouds, monsoon
  • 17
    Jun
    2011
    6:50am, EDT

    Monsoon rains in Kolkata, India

    Piyal Adhikary / EPA

    Commuters wade through water during a heavy rain shower in Kolkata, India on June 17. Monsoon rains enter India's mainland from the southern state of Kerala at the end of May or in the first week of June, and then progress to cover the rest of the country by July.

    Piyal Adhikary / EPA

    Rickshaw wallahs at work as monsoon rains fall in Kolkata on June 17.

    Related content: India struggles to perfect art of monsoon forecasting.

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  • 19
    May
    2011
    5:55am, EDT

    India struggles to perfect art of monsoon forecasting

    Krittivas Mukherjee and Ratnajyoti Dutta of Reuters report from New Delhi: Technological wizardry may have improved forecasting of the crucial monsoon rains in India, but success still remains, at best, patchy, making it tough for farmers to plan crops and meet demand in the trillion-dollar economy.

    Jitendra Prakash / Reuters

    A man rides a cycle rickshaw through a street amid heavy rain showers in the northern Indian city of Allahabad on May 18. This year, the country has forecast a normal monsoon.

     This year, the country has forecast a normal monsoon. In theory, that should mean higher farm output, which could tame food prices and help persuade the government to ease curbs on rice and wheat exports, benefiting other Asian economies that are struggling with food shortages.

    In reality, since 1994, India's weather office has only managed to forecast the June-September monsoon outcome correctly five times, discounting an error band of +/-5 percent, while on seven occasions the extent of error touched double digit, Deutsche Bank analysts said in a research report.

    From the world's top producer and consumer of a range of commodities like sugar and grains, such uncertainties have huge implications for global commodities markets.

    For about 600 million Indians who are dependent on farming, there is a direct correlation between ample rains and their disposable incomes, explaining the host of superstitions that survive around bringing rains, such as women ploughing fields naked and frog "marriages".

    "Current capabilities to forecast monsoon are not sufficient," Shailesh Nayak, the top civil servant in the ministry of earth sciences which controls the country's weather office, told Reuters.

    "We need to augment our capabilities to forecast monsoon more accurately."

    Amit Dave / Reuters

    A woman fills her pitcher with drinking water from a "virda", a small opening made by villagers manually to collect water, from the dried-up Banas river at Sukhpur village, north of the western Indian city of Ahmedabad May 12, 2011. At least 30 virdas have been dug up by villagers in the river. Villagers walk two and a half kilometres to draw drinking water from them, and they say it takes 30-40 minutes to fill a five-litre jar. Occasionally the villagers get their supply of drinking water from municipal tankers but most of the time they depend on the virdas before the monsoon arrives in the region. This year, the country has forecast a normal monsoon. Picture taken May 12, 2011. REUTERS/Amit Dave (INDIA - Tags: ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY)

    Back in 1886, when the India Meteorological Department made its first monsoon forecast, the pace of melting of snow on the Himalayas was used to predict the timing and quantity of rains.

    Now, Indian officials use complicated statistical models aided by super computers and satellite data to predict weather patterns. But as recently as 2009 the weather office got its monsoon forecast completely wrong.

    "Using a statistical approach is a good guide to a seasonal outlook, but this approach tends to limit any statistical anomaly of the past by minimising the possibility that it could happen again," said Michael Ferrari, vice president, Weather Trends International.

    So do India's forecasting methods lag those in the western world? To say yes would only be partially true.

    Among all the major global economies, India's dependence on seasonal rains is unparalleled. It is also the only country to quantify the amount of rains expected -- aimed at allowing farmers to plan crops better but making it more susceptible to errors.

    "A correct forecast of rainfall quantum over a particular area is still a challenge," said Nayak.

    Amit Dave / Reuters

    Women carry pitchers filled with drinking water that they drew from a well near the banks of the dried-up Dharji lake at Dharji village, west of Ahmedabad, on May 14. The village has six wells but only one of them has water. In the afternoon women from the village must wait for two to three hours for the water level to rise before they are able to draw water. Also, it is a two to three kilometres' walk to the well. Authorities say water levels have dropped due to a decrease in rainfall.

    Forecasts also have political implications given the farm sector employs two-thirds of India's 1.2 billion people -- the single largest factor influencing politics, even though it only makes up 14.6 percent of the economy.

    A normal monsoon brings a boost to farm incomes and so to demand -- for cars, motorcycles, consumer goods and even gold, which is used for investment.

    Scant rainfall brings pressure on the government, as farmers demand higher prices and ask to waive loan repayments and electricity charges, impacting public finances.

    A failed monsoon can also send shockwaves into international markets. In 2009, the country suffered its worst drought since 1972 after initial forecasts had been for normal rains. India had to import sugar, driving global prices to their highest in three decades.

    "The sensitivity around the Indian monsoon has financial repercussions both within India and abroad. Particularly with respect to sugar, which has become a much more important global commodity in light of higher oil and (corn derived) ethanol prices," Ferrari said.

     

    Rupak De Chowdhuri / Reuters, file

    Villagers solemnise a frog marriage at Madhyaboragari village, east of Siliguri in this July 19, 2009 file photo. The frog marriage is a traditional ritual to appease the gods in order to bring in rain and ensure a good harvest.

    But for many of India's farmers, the monsoon is still about studying wind direction and observing cloud patterns, with a dose of superstition thrown in.

    In eastern India, it is not unknown for farmers to ask their unmarried daughters to plough parched fields naked to embarrass the weather gods into bringing rains.

    Elsewhere, customs such as marrying off two frogs and holding community feasts are followed in the hope of rains.

    According to Indian weather officials, improving forecasting methods is a work in constant progress.

    "We have to bring in uncertainties of monsoon forecast to forefront to better understand complexities involved with the business of weather prediction," said Ajit Tyagi, India's weather office chief.

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  • 6
    Aug
    2010
    1:56pm, EDT

    Merlin via Reuters

    A recent but undated image of flooding in the northwest Pakistan released by Merlin NGO August 6, 2010. Heavy rains are expected to lash areas of Pakistan already devastated by the worst floods in 80 years.

    Flooding in Pakistan

    The quality of this image isn't very good and it's from an NGO, but the content is very dramatic. They are expecting more heavy rains as well. More photos from our slideshow.

    2 comments

    I AM SORRY!!!! For the people of pakistan. BUT,,,It is not for the people of the USA to bail them or anyother country out !!!!!!!!!!! I do not remember any thing they ever done for us. We are in a bad enouigh of a spot w/out sending our money over to a country that does not give a damn about us.

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Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

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