Haryana faces 6th drought in 11 years, Punjab fifth
Out of 17 years since 1998, Haryana has received at least 10% below normal monsoon rains in 12 years.

In what appears to be an alarming trend of the southwest monsoon in the past two decades, the two states have consistently received below normal monsoon rainfall since 1998.
Out of 17 years since 1998, Haryana has received at least 10% below normal monsoon rains in 12 years. The corresponding figure for Punjab is 11 of out 17 years, counting the present year as deficient.
Punjab currently has a monsoon shortfall of 36% and Haryana 34%. These deficits are likely to grow through September as little rain is expected after the monsoon withdraws from the region.
"The poor rainfall in the two states appears to be one of the features of the current low-monsoon epoch that began in the 1980s," said D Sivananda Pai, the lead monsoon forecaster at IMD.
While weak rainfall has put farmers under strain, it has not impacted the sowing of key kharif crops like paddy, basmati, cotton, maize and bajra. Barring cotton, which has been attacked by whitefly pest, other crops have not reported any major disease or pest incidence. In Haryana, area under cotton is 5.80 lakh hectares and in Punjab it is 4.50 lakh hectares this season.
The low impact of rains on agriculture is principally because farmers have been drawing more and more groundwater for irrigating their fields. In Punjab, farmers operate an estimated 14 lakh tubewells and the state overexploits its groundwater by 45% each year. According to the Central Groundwater Board, underground water in Punjab is overexploited in 103 out of the 138 blocks.
The story is similar in Haryana, which overdraws its groundwater by 9%. More than half — 55 out of 108 — blocks in the state are overexploited, according to CGWB.
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