From Monsoon Dependence to Monsoon Management: A New Irrigation Architecture for Rural India
Every year, around April and May, India enters a familiar cycle. Preliminary monsoon forecasts are released. Economists begin warning about inflationary pressures. Journalists amplify concerns about agricultural output, rural demand, and GDP growth. Discussions emerge about food prices, reservoir levels, and the possibility of drought-like conditions. Some concern is understandable. Agriculture remains deeply connected to monsoon behaviour. Yet the annual anxiety cycle also reveals something more structural: India still lacks sufficient distributed capacity to systematically capture, store, recharge, and redeploy monsoon water. The issue is not simply whether rainfall will fluctuate. Monsoon variability is a permanent feature of the subcontinent’s climate system. The deeper issue is that India continues to experience a paradoxical water cycle: floods during the monsoon, water stress months later, and repeated fears regarding agricultural production. This is not merely a climatic condit...