Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

It’s late November, where is the warm and sunny weather?

 

It has been quite an eventful week with the first tropical cyclone of the season, Paddy, developing near Christmas Island, off the northwest shelf of Australia. Paddy developed early in the cyclone season, the average date for cyclone development in Australia is around January.  

La Nina also was officially declared on Tuesday, November 23, which typically brings a wet, cloudy and mild summer to Australia.  

Summer is less than a week away, but southeastern Australia is experiencing unseasonably cool, cloudy and wet weather this week. So, what is happening? 

The widespread rain, cloud and severe storms on the forecast this week are a result of warm tropical moisture from both the Pacific and Indian Ocean colliding. The image below shows water vapor or moisture streaming down from the Indian Ocean towards southern and eastern Australia on Wednesday evening, November 24.  

 satellite

 

The tropical air has combined forces with an upper-level low-pressure system, generating widespread rain, low solar output, severe storms and cool temperatures across eastern Australia on Thursday and Friday. 

 This unsettled weather will focus on northeastern SA, QLD, NSW, the ACT and northern and eastern Victoria on Thursday and Friday, with the risk of flooding in these areas.  

 Widespread rainfall totals of 20-50mm are predicted in these areas over the next two days to Saturday, November 27 at 11am. Isolated pockets of 60-100mm in 48 hours are expected, particularly in thunderstorms (figure 1).  

 rain this week

 Figure 1: Accumulated rainfall over the next two days to 11am Saturday, November 27.  

 Thick cloud is expected to blanket eastern Australia for the next 2 to 3 days, reducing solar output in these areas. Severe thunderstorms are also likely across much of NSW and QLD on Thursday and Friday, particularly northern inland NSW and central and southern Queensland.

Heavy rainfall is the most likely hazard, although damaging winds, large hail and even tornadoes are not out of the question. In fact, 44mm was recorded in 1 hour over the southern Riverina District, NSW this morning in a severe thunderstorm.  

 Thunderstorms are likely to continue in NSW and QLD each day until at least Thursday, December 2, as a trough lingers in the area. The cloud, rain and cool, brisk southerly winds are causing unseasonably cool temperatures for the southern states today and for the eastern states from Friday, November 27.  

 Bankstown’s temperatures on both Saturday and Sunday are unlikely to exceed 19 degrees, which is nearly eight degrees below November’s average. 

While temperatures in the next few days are expected to remain cool, the southern states will finally warm up from Monday until at least Thursday, December 2. Hot temperatures are expected across northern SA and northwestern NSW and VIC on Thursday, December 2 (figure 2). 

 max

 Figure 2: ECMWF Maximum temperature forecast for Thursday, December 2.  

 For more information on Weatherzone’s solar, rain and temperature forecasting, please contact us at apac.sales@dtn.com 

Latest news

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

Lightning Tracker WA: Real-Time Tracker for Western Australia | Radar, Alerts & Weather Map

Lightning tracker WA technology by DTN APAC helps industries across Western Australia stay one step ahead of severe weather events. From mining to aviation, we deliver precision insights through real-time lightning detection tools. Visualise strikes, monitor thunderstorms, and respond faster with radar and satellite intelligence tailored to the region’s unique weather risks. Track Lightning Strikes […]

Why have NSW businesses flooded and when will the rain stop?

An unprecedented May deluge has impacted businesses across eastern NSW this week, with some rain gauges eclipsing their previous monthly records in the space of just three days. So why is eastern NSW seeing so much rain this week? In an average May, the NSW Mid North Coast and Hunter regions would see about 50 […]

Historic flooding as eastern NSW deluge continues

Flood records are being broken in parts of eastern NSW this week as relentless rainfall continues to dump water into already overflowing rivers and creeks, affecting businesses and industries through road and transport closures and disruptions due to flooding. A steady stream of moisture-laden onshore winds has been causing persistent rain over eastern NSW since […]

Indian monsoon onset on the doorstep

Heavy rainfall and squally thunderstorms will intensify over southern India with the arrival of the southwest Indian monsoon this week. The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) is responsible for tracking the advance of the monsoon over the Indian sub-continent. The latest map issued by the IMD shows the northern limit of the southwest monsoon just to […]