Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

Australia’s second severe tropical cyclone formed this morning

 

Tropical Cyclone Charlotte strengthened rapidly overnight, becoming Australia’s second severe tropical cyclone so far this season.  

Charllotte was located around 1000 kilometres to the northwest of Port Hedland at 6:40am WST on Tuesday, March 22. The system is moving slowly to the southwest away from mainland WA. 

Charlotte became a category 1 cyclone on Monday morning and by early Tuesday morning, it had reached category 3 strength, with wind gusts reaching 165 kilometers per hour near its centre. 

In response to this rapid deepening, Charlotte has developed a clear eye at the centre of the storm, which can be seen on the satellite image below. 

 MicrosoftTeams-image (300)

Image: Infrared satellite image of Severe Tropical Cyclone Charlotte at 6:10am AWST on Tuesday, March 22, 2022. 

What is the eye of a cyclone?  

The eye is the centre of a tropical cyclone and is where the lowest pressure is found. Once fully-formed, a tropical cyclone consists of towering thunderstorms and rainbands surrounding a relatively clear and calm eye. The most violent weather is usually found inside the eye-wall of a tropical cyclone. 

The average tropical cyclone eye typically measures about 10-60 km in diameter. However, they can get bigger or smaller than this. The eye of tropical Cyclone Tracy, which was a very small but powerful cyclone, only had a diameter of 12km. 

Where will Charlotte go next? 

Charlotte is expected to gain more strength on Tuesday and may become a high-end category three system. However, Charlotte is expected to weaken from Wednesday as it moves towards the southwest into a less favourable environment. 

Forecast models suggest that Charlotte should weaken below cyclone strength on Thursday and turn towards the south, allowing the ex-tropical cyclone to track roughly parallel to the Australia’s west coast from Friday into the weekend. 

At this stage, most models suggest that Ex-Tropical Cyclone Charlotte will remain offshore, however there is a high degree of uncertainty in the system’s movement beyond Thursday. 

It is possible that ex-tropical cyclone Charlotte will cause wind and rain to increase over western districts of WA this weekend or early next week. However, this depends on the future track and strength of the system. 

More reliable forecasts for WA will become available towards the end of this week as Charlotte tracks south and gets closer to the state. Once a tropical cyclone or potential tropical cyclone has been identified, detailed forecasts are promulgated with tracking information and risk assessment.

Detailed Tropical Cyclone forecasts are provided in addition to the tropical cyclone outlook and summary. Detailed Tropical Cyclone charts and data are updated at regular intervals by our meteorologists 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. For more information, 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.

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, […]

Active seas to the north and east of Australia disrupting port and maritime operations

Seas to the north and east of Australia are experiencing periods of increased activity this week, leading to disruptions to port, maritime and offshore operations. Intense and hazardous Tasman Sea Ocean conditions across NSW’s South Coast rapidly deteriorated last Friday as a deep feed of easterly winds whipped up large and dangerous seas. The Batemans […]

Transport, emergency and energy industries flooded across Greater Sydney with weekend deluges

Transport, emergency, energy and port industries in eastern NSW and Sydney were impacted by significant flash flooding with intense and heavy rainfall this weekend. Rainfall rates between 80 and 140mm in one to three hours were registered across parts of Sydney’s Northern Beaches and Central Coast on Saturday afternoon and evening. In some areas, these […]

DTN Dangerous Thunderstorm Alerts in action with severe thunderstorms disrupting Perth industries

Severe thunderstorms impacted southwest WA and the Perth region on Sunday, December 14, 2025, triggering Dangerous Thunderstorm Alerts (DTA) by DTN for industries and businesses in the region. DTN operates Dangerous Thunderstorm Alerts (DTA) which alert businesses and industries to thunderstorms based on intensity and movement. These alerts provide advanced notice of thunderstorms moving into […]