Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

Huge temperature contrast to drive severe weather in southern Australia

A strong cold front will sweep across southeastern Australia in the next 48 hours, bringing a dangerous mix of damaging winds, severe thunderstorms and catastrophic fire danger ahead of a welcome cool change. 

The satellite image below shows a trough extending from WA down to SA, generating a massive line of thunderstorms stretching 700km across SA. The image also shows a cold front in the Bight, with some cold air that is producing a large field of speckled cloud over the Southern Ocean. 


Image: Himawari-8 satellite image at 9am AEDT on Friday, December 8 

The cold front will move further north and east on Friday and the weekend, with the colder air pushing against much hotter air in SA and VIC.  

The image below shows the forecast air temperatures around 1.5km above sea level on Saturday afternoon, showing the stark temperature contrast between the air to the north and south of the cold front.  

Huge temperature contrast to drive severe weather in southern Australia

Image: Forecast 850 hPa temperature at 11am AEDT on Saturday, December 7, according to the ECMWF model 

On Saturday, Melbourne will be cool, while in Sydney the city will swelter through extreme heat. The forecast maximum temperature difference between the cities is 24 °C, with western Sydney expecting a top of 44 °C and Melbourne 20 °C. 

The approaching cool airmass and its interaction with much hotter air sitting over the Australian continent will produce a dynamic mix of weather: 

  • Thunderstorms are likely to affect parts of SA, NSW, ACT, Vic, TAS on Friday and NSW and the ACT on Saturday. 
  • Some storms will become severe with damaging or destructive winds the most likely threat, particularly about SA, Vic and southwestern NSW on Friday.  
  • Blustery northwesterly winds ahead of the front, with damaging gusts possible in parts of SA, elevated areas of Vic, NSW and the ACT in the next 48 hours. The southerly winds will also be strong and gusty. 
  • Very hot and windy conditions ahead of the front will bring extreme-to-catastrophic fire danger to SA on Friday 8th, the worst fire danger since the 2019/20 black summer.  
  • Extreme fire danger is forecast in parts of NSW and VIC on Friday and Saturday, while high fire danger is forecast for parts of Qld. 

Severe weather warnings have been issued in several states and territories, which you can read here. 

In addition to the cold front, a low-pressure system will develop near SA on Sunday bringing heavy rainfall from the northwest to the southeast of the state.  

The map below shows that 3 day accumulated rainfall to Monday afternoon in SA, with widespread totals of 40-80mm and isolated parts of the Eyre Peninsula and West Coast could see falls exceeding 100 mm with the system.  This rainfall could lead to flooding, particularly in areas that are  typically much drier.

Huge temperature contrast to drive severe weather in southern Australia

Image: Accumulated rainfall for 3 days leading up to 4:10am ACDT on Monday, December 11, according to the ACCESS-G model.

At this stage, the rainfall should ease from Monday as the low-pressure system moves over the Bight. However, showers will continue to stream into SA along the western flank of the low early next week before the system finally progresses east.  

We will be watching this system closely as it evolves, so please keep up to date with any warnings issued for this heavy rainfall and storm event.  

DTN APAC provides a suite of services tailored towards the insurance industry. From severe weather ‘heads-up’ from our meteorologist team, to detailed warnings and extreme observation alerts, to post-event reporting, we can cover any major weather event. To find out more, please explore our website or email us at apac.sales@dtn.com.

 

Latest news

Satisfy your weather obsession with these news headlines from around the nation, and the world.

Rapid El Niño signal accelerating risk for Australian businesses

El Niño–favourable conditions are gathering pace across the tropical Pacific, with key ocean indicators approaching threshold levels and early atmospheric responses emerging.  While uncertainty remains around final El Niño strength, historical analogues show that even weak events can generate widespread impacts, including reduced rainfall, warmer daytime temperatures, increased frost risk, elevated fire danger, reduced tropical cyclone activity, and more. Industries including […]

Australia’s 2025–26 Cyclone Season: Slightly Above Average, Dominated by Severe Systems

Australia has just experienced a highly impactful tropical cyclone season, with more than 60% of systems reaching severe intensity, causing widespread disruption and damage to communities and multiple industries across northern Australia.  The 2025–26 Australian tropical cyclone season officially ran from 1 November 2025 to 30 April 2026. During this six-month period, Australia saw 11 tropical cyclones, with nine […]

What does a ‘super El Niño’ mean for Australia’s businesses?

There are signs that a very strong, or ‘super’ El Niño could develop in the tropical Pacific Ocean later this year. So, what does this mean for Australia’s weather during the second half of 2026? El Niño on the horizon The tropical Pacific Ocean is currently in a neutral state, meaning neither El Niño nor […]

How does DTN help businesses monitor bushfire induced pyrocumulonimbus thunderstorms that ignite more fires?

Intense heat from bushfires during elevated fire danger days can trigger fire-induced pyrocumulonimbus thunderstorms that ignite additional fires. In early January 2026, an extreme heatwave sweeping over southeastern Australia brought catastrophic fire danger to Victoria. Intensely hot bush and grass fires spread erratically and quickly in hot, dry and gusty winds, with pyrocumulonimbus generating lightning, […]