Dry Winter 2025–26: Western Disturbances & Food Security

Failure of Western Disturbances in 2025–26 has caused a dry winter in Northwest India, affecting agriculture, groundwater recharge and Himalayan ecosystems.
Dry Winter 2025–26(WannaBeHPAS)

Dry Winter in Northwest India (2025–26)

Meteorological Mechanics, Socio-Economic Risks and Policy Roadmap(Dry Winter)

Syllabus: UPSC GS-I&III – (Environment & Disaster Climate)

Introduction

The winter of 2025–26 has emerged as one of the driest in recent decades for Northwest India—Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, J&K, Rajasthan and western UP. The region, normally dependent on Western Disturbances (WDs) for winter rain and snow, has recorded an 80% precipitation deficit during the crucial January window.

This is not merely a seasonal anomaly but a systemic risk to India’s food security, water resources and Himalayan ecology. The failure of winter moisture disrupts:

  • Rabi crops (wheat, mustard, gram)
  • Snowpack that feeds rivers and glaciers
  • Horticulture in the hills (apple, almonds)
  • Rural livelihoods of marginal farmers.

1. Executive Overview: Why This Winter Matters

The “Chillai Kalan” Factor

  • Period: 21 December – 29 January
  • Known as the coldest phase in Kashmir–Himalaya
  • Provides heavy snowfall → natural water storage

2025–26 Reality

  • Virtually snowless Chillai Kalan
  • Streams and springs running below normal
  • January—usually the wettest winter month—remained dry.

UPSC Insight: Himalayas act as India’s “Water Tower.”
Loss of snowpack = summer water insecurity + glacier instability.

Infographic


2. Meteorological Mechanics – The Triple Failure

Northwest winter climate depends on an atmospheric “supply chain.” In 2025–26, three drivers failed together:

A) Absence of Active Western Disturbances

  • Normal winter: 5–7 WDs bring rain/snow
  • This season: systems were weak, fast-moving, moisture-starved
  • Result: no cloud cover → higher day temperatures, colder nights.

B) El Niño Influence

  • Warm central Pacific altered global circulation
  • Suppressed moisture transport toward India
  • Reduced frequency of cold waves with precipitation.

C) Jet Stream Misalignment

  • Subtropical westerly jet positioned unfavourably
  • Created anticyclonic dry cold instead of precipitation.

Fog without Rain – A Paradox

ConditionResult this Winter
Weak windsNo atmospheric mixing
Temperature inversionTrapped surface moisture
Cloudless nightsRapid cooling → dense fog

Thus: visibility crisis but zero rainfall.


3. Ecological & Hydrological Crisis in Himalayas

A) Snowpack Deficit

  • Snow is a slow-release reservoir
  • Absence means:
    • poor groundwater recharge
    • reduced spring flows
    • stress on rivers in summer.

B) Phenological Disruptions

  • Warm days triggered early blooming in Ladakh & Kashmir
  • Without snow insulation → flowers face:
    • late frost
    • “dry cold” shocks
    • fruit-set failure.

C) Disaster Risks

  • Faster glacier melt
  • Formation of pro-glacial lakes
  • Higher probability of GLOF events
  • Increased winter forest fires due to dry litter.

4. Agriculture Under Stress – Wheat & Mustard

Thermal Thresholds for Wheat

StageDanger Temperature
Flowering31°C
Grain Filling35°C

Yield Loss Proxy (Global Studies)

  • +1°C at flowering → ~518 kg/ha loss
  • +1°C at grain filling → ~1140 kg/ha loss

Mechanism:
Heat → shortened grain filling → shrivelled grains → low weight.

Mustard Risks

  • Highly sensitive to radiative frost
  • No WD clouds → greater night cooling.

Field Mitigation

  • Light irrigation (raises heat capacity)
  • Smoke insulation
  • Plastic mulching → soil temp +10°C.

5. Water Resources – Beyond One Season

  • Reduced snow persistence weakens:
    • aquifers
    • hill springs
    • base flow to Indus–Ganga tributaries.
  • Though reservoirs from good monsoon may buffer 2026 rabi, repeated dry winters = structural water crisis.

6. Socio-Economic Dimension: The Marginal Farmer

Who is Most Affected?

  • 68.5% of Indian farmers cultivate <1 ha
  • Average holding: 0.38 ha

Income Shock

CropMedian Loss
Paddy₹8,400
Wheat₹9,200
  • For 0.01–0.40 ha farmers → 78% of annual crop income wiped out
  • 0.40–1.00 ha → ~28% loss.

Coping Strategies

  • 72% depend more on livestock
  • 1 in 3 resort to distress migration
  • 47% seek MGNREGS work.

7. Policy Framework – What Exists, What Fails

SchemeRoleGap
PM-KISANIncome support13% exclusion
PMFBYCrop insuranceOnly 35% enrolled
Soil Health CardMoisture/nutrient mgmt17% usage
Custom Hiring CentresMechanisation66% lack access

8. Strategic Roadmap (UPSC-Ready)

A) Shift in Policy Metric

  • From “tonnes per hectare”
  • to “kg of grain per cubic metre of water.”

B) Universal Risk Protection

  • Saturate PMFBY for marginal farmers
  • Index-based insurance for frost & heat waves.

C) Digital Public Infrastructure

  • Agri-Stack + IMD Agromet
  • plot-level advisories for irrigation & sowing.

D) Himalayan Water Security

  • Spring-shed revival
  • snow & glacier monitoring
  • GLOF early warning.

E) Bazaar Innovations

  • Agritech (SatSure, DeHaat, IBISA)
  • village micro-cold storage
  • affordable CHCs.

UPSC VALUE ADD

Syllabus Links

GS-1:

  • Western Disturbances, Himalayan climatology

GS-3:

  • Agriculture & climate change
  • Water security, disasters, environment

Essay:

  • Food–Water–Climate Nexus
  • Himalayan ecology & development.

Probable Mains Questions

  1. Explain the role of Western Disturbances in Northwest India’s rabi economy. Assess impacts of the 2025–26 dry winter on food and water security.
  2. “Himalayan snowpack is India’s strategic water reserve.” Discuss consequences of its decline and policy responses.
  3. Evaluate India’s farm safety nets in protecting marginal farmers from climate variability.

10 Prelims One-Liners

  1. WDs originate in Mediterranean region.
  2. Chillai Kalan: 21 Dec–29 Jan.
  3. Snowpack ensures gradual summer discharge.
  4. Wheat heat threshold: 31°C flowering.
  5. Mustard vulnerable to radiative frost.
  6. El Niño reduces winter moisture.
  7. Fog can occur without rainfall under inversion.
  8. GLOF risk rises with warm winters.
  9. PMFBY enrollment only ~35%.
  10. Average marginal holding: 0.38 ha.

Conclusion

The dry winter of 2025–26 signals a paradigm shift:

From production-centric agriculture → resilience-centric food systems.

India must integrate meteorology + technology + social protection to shield the marginal farmer from the volatile physics of a warming planet.

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