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Easter deluge possible as tropical moisture moves south

The tropical moisture that caused significant flooding in the NT and Qld is set to move southeast over Easter, bringing heavy rainfall, thunderstorms and possible flooding and damaging winds with it. 

The map below shows the massive rainfall totals that fell across the southern NT and parts of Qld over the last week. 

Image: The Red Centre became the purple centre. Source: Bureau of Meteorology 

During the week ending on Wednesday, March 27, Rabbit Flat in the NT recorded 277 mm, contributing to its wettest March on record. 

The moisture from Ex-Tropical Cyclone Megan and a low-pressure trough combined to cause this extremely wet week. 

This moisture and trough will continue to generate thunderstorms and heavy rainfall over the coming days across parts of the NT and Qld.  

The tropical moisture is expected to move south and then east over the Easter weekend, with heavy rainfall expected in eastern SA and western NSW on Sunday.  

There is still considerable uncertainty on where and how much rainfall will fall over the region, but one computer model suggests widespread falls of 20-30mm and isolated areas of 50-100mm are possible in western SA on Sunday. 

 

Image: Accumulated rainfall for the 24 hours leading up to 11pm on Sunday, March 31, according to ECMWF 

The tropical moisture should link up with a cold front that will sweep across southeastern Australia in the back end of the Easter long weekend, dragging the rainband eastward into western and central Vic on Monday. 

The map below shows that 20-30mm could fall in southeastern SA and western Vic on Monday. 

 

Image: Accumulated rainfall for the 24 hours leading up to 11pm on Monday, April 1, according to ECMWF 

Early next week, there are early signs that a cut off low could develop in the Tasman Sea near NSW and Vic. 

Some computer models are showing rainfall increasing across central and eastern Vic and parts of NSW on Tuesday, with 40-60 mm in a day possible in some areas. 

 

 Image: Accumulated rainfall for the 24 hours leading up to 11pm on Tuesday, April 2, according to ECMWF 

On Wednesday, the models predict heavy falls across eastern Vic and southern NSW, which could cause flooding in the region. If the low develops, damaging winds could also impact parts of central and eastern Vic early next week.  

Image: Accumulated rainfall for the 24 hours leading up to 11pm on Wednesday, April 3, according to ECMWF 

Please keep an eye out for the latest warnings as this weekend unfolds here.  

Stormtracker is a severe weather solution that can assist you in observing, in real-time, any storm or event that has the potential to impact your business. 

Embedded in DTN APAC’ industry interfaces, the system gives you a time advantage when monitoring conditions developing over your infrastructure and location. 

Stormtracker is our Global Information System (GIS) tracking tool, providing multiple weather layers and zoom controls overlaid on a map of your location and infrastructure. You can choose a snapshot or full screen view, depending on your requirements. The maps allow you to monitor all weather, and specifically any systems likely to cause risk for your business. You also have the capacity to observe: 

  • real time lightning and thunderstorm alerts 
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  • sentinel hotspot fires and fire agency current incidents 

Stormtracker’s radar imagery updates every 10 minutes, so you are always able to respond rapidly to changing conditions. You can customise alerting to notify you when your staff or infrastructure are under threat. With increased situational awareness, your ability to make informed decisions quickly is optimised. 

DTN APAC’ experience and intelligence gives you a clear path through complex situations. Let us assist you, offering actionable insight when extreme weather poses risk to your business. For more information, please contact us at apac.sales@dtn.com. 

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