Monsoon Covers Two-Third Of India Previously Than Normal, To Speed Up Crop Sowing

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
India's annual monsoon rains have covered two-third of the country, nearly a fortnight ahead of the normal schedule, a weather department
official said on Monday, adding that conditions are favourable for further advancement into the north-western parts this week.The early
arrival of monsoon rains in central and northern India will help farmers accelerate sowing of summer-sown crops such as paddy rice, cotton,
soybean and pulses, and may boost crop yields too."Monsoon has already covered some parts of Punjab
Usually, it enters Punjab in the last week of June," said an official at the India Meteorological Department (IMD), who declined to be
named.Monsoon arrived in Kerala on June 3 against the usual June 1, but has advanced quickly since.Since the start of the season, the
monsoon has delivered 25% more-than-normal rainfall, boosted by higher rainfall in the central India region, data compiled by IMD
showed.Monsoon is crucial for India's $2.7-trillion economy, as it delivers nearly 70% of the rain needed by farms, besides replenishing
reservoirs and aquifers.Sowing of summer-sown crops such as cotton, rice, soybean, corn and pulses has already started in southern and
western states, and could start in central and northern India this week, said a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm."Farmers are
interested in rice and oilseeds due to higher prices
We might see higher area under soybean and paddy," the dealer said.India is the world's biggest exporter of rice and top importer of
edible oils such as palm oil, soyoil and sunflower oil.Nearly half of India's farmland gets no irrigation and is dependent on the annual
rains from June to September
Farming accounts for nearly 15% of the economy but sustains more than half of a population of 1.3 billion.