Relevance (UPSC): GS-III – Agriculture, Science & Technology (Weather Services)
India’s farm weather advice now runs mainly through a national network of Agro-Met Field Units anchored by the India Meteorological Department. These centres issue location-specific farm advisories based on five-day forecasts and seasonal outlooks, helping farmers time sowing, irrigation, plant protection and harvest.
Where the advice comes from
Agro-Met Field Units (AMFUs) and District Agromet Units (DAMUs) are part of India’s Gramin Krishi Mausam Sewa (GKMS) project, which provides weather-based agricultural advisories to farmers.
- These units, managed by organizations like the India Meteorological Department (IMD), collaborate with State Agricultural Universities and Krishi Vigyan Kendras (KVKs) to create and disseminate location-specific information via bulletins and digital platforms like the “Mausam” app and SMS.
- Their goal is to help farmers make informed decisions about farming operations by providing forecasts and warnings tailored to their specific crops and local weather conditions.
- Agro-Met Field Units operate at agricultural universities and research institutes across 127 agro-climatic zones (about 130 units nationwide). They prepare crop-stage tips using forecasts for rainfall, temperature, humidity, cloud, wind speed and wind direction.
- Earlier District Agro-Met Units set up in several districts were discontinued from March 1, 2024; the service continues through the field-unit network.
How farmers receive it
- Twice-a-week district bulletins are posted on the India Meteorological Department portal; farmers can also read them on the Meghdoot mobile app in local languages. Many farmers receive the advice as text messages.
Why it matters
- Studies and field experience show that weather-based advisories help avoid avoidable losses and improve decision-making at the plot level.
- The service is free, public and nationwide—important for risk reduction in a changing climate. A policy discussion on district-level units is ongoing, but the advisory backbone remains active.
Key terms
- Agro-Met Field Unit: a centre that blends weather forecasts with crop advice for farmers.
- Farm weather bulletin: a short, district note that tells farmers what to do in the coming days.
- Meghdoot: a government app that shows district and crop-wise advisories.
Exam hook
UPSC Prelims question
Q. With reference to farm weather advisory services in India, consider the following statements:
- The advisory is issued under Gramin Krishi Mausam Sewa through Agro-Met Field Units located in agro-climatic zones.
- District-level Agro-Met Units were discontinued in 2024, but advisories continue nationwide.
- Advisories are typically released twice a week and can be read on the Meghdoot app.
- The advisories contain only rainfall forecasts and do not cover wind or temperature.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Answer: 1, 2 and 3 only.
One-line wrap: Reliable, free weather advice—delivered locally and regularly—has become a quiet safety-net for India’s farmers.
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