27 September 2023

Bureau advises winter weather to warm up

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The State is set for a warmer winter with the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) predicting unusually high temperatures across southern and eastern Victoria in the coming months.

Updating its Winter 2022 Climate Outlook, the Bureau said the Outlook reflected a developing negative Indian Ocean Dipole, a slowly declining La Niña in the Pacific Ocean and warmer than average waters around northern Australia.

“There is an above 80 per cent chance of unusually high winter temperatures in coastal, south-western and northern parts of Western Australia; coastal northern areas of the Northern Territory and Queensland; south-eastern New South Wales; southern and eastern Victoria; and all of Tasmania,” BoM said.

“A large section of central Australia has an increased chance of unusually low winter daytime temperatures, in the coolest 20 per cent of past winters,” it said.

“This extends from Western Australia’s eastern area through central Australia into the eastern States.”

The Bureau said warmer than average nights were likely almost everywhere – with at least an 80 per cent chance of higher minimum temperatures for most of the country.

However, it said the Winter Outlook predicted unusually wet conditions for inland parts of New South Wales, South Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory, which are likely to be in the top 20 per cent of wettest winters.

“With Northern Australia’s dry season starting in May, it only takes a small amount of extra rain to be above average at this time of year,” BoM said.

“With already saturated catchments in south-eastern Australia, the winter rain extends the flood risk for these regions.”

It said the flood waters in low lying areas in Queensland and New South Wales would slowly move inland towards South Australia over the coming months.

“Parts of south-western Australia and south-western Tasmania are likely to have below average rainfall this winter,” BoM said.

BoM’s Winter 2022 Outlook can be accessed at this PS News link.

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