The region of about half-a-billion people is regularly stricken by flash floods, landslides and torrential rains that kill thousands and displace millions of people, as well as drowning crops and livestock.
Floods cost India about USD 3 billion in losses every year -- about 10 per cent of the world total, according to the study in the journal Nature Communications.
"We find that there is a threefold increase in widespread extreme precipitation events over central India during 1950- 2015," the authors wrote.
As climate change continues to warm the ocean, the frequency and severity of killer storms in India are likely to increase, the team said.
But the ocean is also where the hope lies, in the form of a natural early-warning system.
"The fact that the extremes are linked to the warm ocean temperatures means that they are more predictable," Roxy Koll of the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, a co-author of the study, told AFP.
"The warmest ocean temperatures appear two to three weeks before the extreme events," he said in an email.
Further research must be done and forecasting methods refined, the team said.
But once accurate predictions are possible, "schools and offices can be given holidays for those days when a red alert is given, and people living in low-lying areas can be moved to high-rise areas," Koll said.
"Warnings can be given for driving on those roads which are susceptible to flooding," he added.
According to the study, there were 268 floods in India between 1950 and 2015, killing almost 70,000 people and leaving about 17 million homeless.
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