Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

Dangerous winds spreading across southern Australia

 

Powerful winds, squally showers and thunderstorms will spread across South Australia, Victoria, southern New South Wales and Tasmania today and tomorrow after walloping Western Australia during the last 24 hours.

A strong cold front is making its way across Australia’s southern states during the first half of this week, moving from west to east.

The front reached WA on Monday and caused damaging to destructive wind gusts during Monday into Tuesday morning, with some exposed areas in the state’s southwest enduring their strongest gusts in around a decade.

Image: Visible true-colour satellite image showing the cold front arriving in WA on Monday. Source: RAMMB/CIRA

Cape Leeuwin’s 137 km/h gust at 10:02pm on Monday was the sites most powerful wind observation since 2013. Further north, Mandurah registered a gust of 109 km/h just before 3am on Tuesday, which was its strongest gusts since 2012. Perth Airport also clocked its strongest wind gust in two years from this system, reaching 91 km/h early on Tuesday.

The cold front will continue to march towards the east on Tuesday and Wednesday, causing a surge of blustery winds, squally showers and a few thunderstorms over parts of SA, VIC, southern NSW and TAS.

SA will be affected first, with a severe weather warning in place for damaging winds over most of the state’s southern and central districts on Tuesday, including Adelaide.

The front will then sweep over VIC, TAS and southern NSW late on Tuesday into Wednesday morning, causing dangerous winds, heavy showers and thunderstorms in both states. A severe weather warning has already been issued in VIC and NSW for damaging wind gusts.

Unfortunately, a deep low pressure system passing to the south of Australia will cause more powerful winds over WA, SA, VIC and TAS on Wednesday and Thursday. ONce again, damaging wind gusts are likely in multiple states on these two days as the low gradually moves from west to east.

Images: Forecast wind gusts speed and direction at 1pm AEST on Tuesday (top), Wednesday (middle) and Thursday (bottom) this week, according to the ECMWF-HRES model.

A trough associated with this low pressure system will also cause potentially damaging winds, heavy rain dangerous thunderstorms over parts of NSW and QLD on Thursday and Friday. Warnings will probably be issued in parts of eastern Australia later in the week.

This is the type of weather event that we only expect to see around once per year in southern Australia, so it will be important to keep up to date with the latest warnings during the next few days. 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.

El Niño Is Here: What a Potential Record Event Means for Southeast Asia and Australia

  El Niño was officially declared in June 2026, raising the prospect of widespread impacts across Southeast Asia, from extreme heat and water shortages to higher energy demand and agricultural stress.   The World Meteorological Organization has warned countries to “prepare for it to be severe”, while several global forecast models suggest the event could rank among […]

How El Niño will shape Australian port operations in winter-spring 2026

Australian ports and marine pilots can expect a season of shifting wind and swell patterns through winter and spring 2026, as a developing El Niño brings the likelihood of drier conditions and more variable operating windows across the country’s coastline.  Will El Niño develop in 2026?  There are clear signs that an El Niño pattern is becoming […]

From Kimberley to northern NSW: Bushfire outlook flags risk for resources sector this winter

Bushfire risk doesn’t usually make headlines in June, but AFAC’s winter seasonal outlook is putting mining and resources operators on alert from the Kimberley to the NSW.  Australia’s official seasonal bushfire outlook for winter 2026 was released by AFAC on Thursday, May 28. The outlook predicts increased fire risk across the northern parts of the Great Sandy Desert and surrounds […]

The signal was there weeks earlier: forecasting one of the year’s biggest wind events

In mid-May 2026, DTN APAC meteorologists flagged a strengthening Southern Ocean pattern in model guidance, signalling an extended run of record-challenging wind conditions across the NEM.  Nearly three weeks later, NEM wind generation climbed from around 1.5GW to more than 9GW, supplying roughly one-third of the grid and coming within 1GW of the all-time generation record.  The event highlighted […]