"We need to be on alert and be prepared but not get panic because the country had escaped El Nino without any scratch way back in 1997," former chief of Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices Ashok Gulati told PTI.
"The monsoon seasonal rainfall is likely to be 95 per cent of the Long Period average with an error of plus or minus 5 per cent," Indian Meteorological Department said in a statement.
Officials in the weather department said the monsoon is expected to be below normal because of the El-Nino effect.
Gulati, who is now chair-professor at think-tank ICRIER, said below normal rain does not mean there will be drought.
"We have to see how would be the distribution of rain across the country."
El Nino refers to the warmer-than-average sea surface temperature in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean.
This condition occurs every 4-12 years and had last impacted India's monsoon in 2009, leading to the worst drought in almost four
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