"Quantitatively, monsoon season rainfall for the country as a whole will be 96 per cent of the long period average," Laxman Singh Rathore, Director General, India Meteorological Department (IMD) told reporters here.
In April, the IMD had said the the country would receive 99 per cent rains of the long period average (LPA).
A normal monsoon means rainfall between 96-104 per cent of a 50-year average rains during the four-month season from June to September. The LPA has been pegged at 89 cm.
Most parts of the country are expected to receive good rains in July-August, the crucial months for the country's trillion-dollar economy which depends largely on rain-fed agriculture.
Rains in July this year are likely to be 98 per cent of the long period average, while the rainfall in August is forecast to be 96 per cent of the LPA.
The Northwest region, including Punjab and Haryana, considered to be India's granary states, are expected to receive below normal rains at 93 per cent of the LPA, according to the IMD's update to its monsoon forecast which was issued today.
Monsoon rains arrived four days late over Kerala on June 5 and are yet to pick up steam due to a string of atmospheric storms in the south-east Asian region which had affected the monsoon current. (More)