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The Indian monsoon arrives in Kerala three days later than normal

The weather office reported that monsoon rains arrived in India's southernmost State of Kerala, three days later than normal, offering relief from the brutal heat wave which has pushed power demand to record levels.

Around June 1, the monsoons that are critical to India's $4 trillion economy - Asia's largest - begin to hit Kerala before spreading across the entire country by mid-July.

Monsoons provide almost 70% of all the rain needed to irrigate rice, corn and cotton farms, as well as to replenish aquifers,?reservoirs, and soybean and sugarcane fields.

The India Meteorological Department predicted last month that El Nino would weaken the monsoon by 2026, resulting in the lowest rainfall for 11 years. This has fueled concerns about?crops and food prices, as well as growth.

IMD reported that the?southwest Monsoon' has covered all of Kerala, as well as parts of Tamil Nadu.

It said that conditions are favorable for the group to continue its advance into Goa, areas of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka as well as the remaining parts of Tamil Nadu in the next two or three days.

Heatwaves are affecting several Indian states, with temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius.

IMD last month said that India will receive rainfall below average in June, less than 92% the long-period mean.

A Mumbai-based dealer at a global trading house said that the planting of summer-sown crop is unlikely to be affected by the monsoon, if it 'covers the remainder of the country on schedule', as it has in the past despite a late onset. (Reporting and editing by Christopher Cushing, Joe Bavier, and Rajendra Jadhav)

(source: Reuters)