Learn bits
Ecology & Environment, Schemes & Policies
Mahesh

15/09/24 20:04 PM IST

Mission Mausam

In News
  • Recently, the Cabinet cleared a ₹2,000 crore programme called Mission Mausam to upgrade infrastructure used to make atmospheric observations.
Objectives of the mission
  • The mission’s focus is to improve atmospheric observations to enable better quality monsoon forecasts, improve alerts warning of deteriorating air quality, and warn of extreme weather events and cyclones.
  • Critical elements of the mission include deploying ‘next-generation radars’ and satellite systems with advanced sensors and high-performance supercomputers, developing improved earth-system models, and a GIS-based automated Decision Support System for real-time data dissemination.
  • The nodal agency involved in executing the mission is the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES).
  • In the first tranche of the mission until 2026, the MoES hopes to procure and install up to 60 weather radars, 15 wind profilers, and 15 radiosondes.
  • These instruments give regular updates on the changing parameters of wind speeds, atmospheric pressure, humidity, and temperature at various elevations of the atmosphere.
Monsoon Mission
  • The predecessor is the ‘Monsoon Mission,’ launched in 2012.
  • Historically, the IMD has relied on statistical methods to forecast monsoons.
  • Different weather parameters were permuted and combined in myriad ways to prepare forecasts about the likely performance of the monsoon in a particular year. These were extremely broad estimates; they almost never warned of the likelihood of droughts and also could not capture the wide regional diversity of the monsoon.
  • The Monsoon Mission proposed a radical approach.
  • Since 2004, meteorologists and climate scientists have been working on a different approach to forecasting that relies on high performance computing machines, or supercomputers.
  • They sought to simulate the weather on a particular day and, via physics equations, make a map of how each day’s weather would pan out over the next few days, weeks, and even months.
  • These weather models, called dynamical models, are now the standard approach to weather forecasts and climate studies.
  • This can give more accurate ‘medium range’ forecasts and often this is what consumers of weather information find useful.
  • The Monsoon Mission eventually succeeded in developing a general-purpose dynamical model that can be tweaked to generate forecasts on multiple timescales — from daily forecasts to seasonal monsoon predictions.
  • Beyond the monsoon, such a model could be customised for heatwaves, cold waves, and local forecasts.
  • It is also an expensive approach to forecasting and requires sophisticated computers, radars, wind profilers, and an array of data-gathering devices.
Significance
  • The latest mission builds on its predecessor by getting more of such equipment, it has outlined a radical plan for “weather management.”
  • This means actively changing the weather using cloud seeding.
  • The latter involves spraying clouds with appropriate chemicals to increase or decrease their water-carrying capacity.
  • Plans are also afoot to control lightning.
  • As statistics reveal, lightning strikes are the number one cause of nature-propelled deaths in India and were responsible for 2,821 or 35% of the 8,060 accidental deaths attributable to natural forces in 2022.
  • Meteorologists say they hope one day to be able to tweak the electrical characteristics of the cloud so that there are less lightning strikes that lethally traverse from sky to ground.
  • To this end, a large ‘cloud chamber’ – that simulates the interior of a cloud – will be set up at the IITM.
  • To be sure, research into weather modification has a history stretching back to the 1950s and many experiments have been conducted in India, including spraying aerosols in certain regions of one cloud, and leaving out the others.
Source- The Hindu

More Related Current Affairs View All

02 Dec

India’s cities, their non-communicable disease burden

'The recent case where a Bengaluru Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) bus driver passed away after cardiac arrest while on duty, has set off discussions on rising poor healt

Read More

30 Nov

Odisha govt will bring in law to prevent cheating in recruitment exams

'The Odisha government has decided to enact a new law with stringent penal provisions to check cheating and other discrepancies in public examinations conducted by various recruitm

Read More

29 Nov

INDIAN ARMY LAUNCHES ‘EKLAVYA’ ONLINE DIGITAL PLATFORM FOR OFFICERS’ TRAINING

' Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) General Upendra Dwivedi  launched an online learning platform for the Indian Army nicknamed as "Eklavya".' This initiative aligns with the

Read More

India’s First Ai-Driven Magazine Generator

Generate Your Custom Current Affairs Magazine using our AI in just 3 steps