Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

La Niña Alert issued

 

The Bureau of Meteorology has today issued a La Niña Alert, increasing the likelihood that they will officially declare a third consecutive La Niña event later this year. 

After two back-to-back La Niña events between September 2020 and June 2022, the Pacific Ocean has been a neutral state, albeit close to La Niña thresholds, for the last two months. 

However, all oceanic and atmospheric indicators used to monitor the Pacific Ocean have been trending towards La Niña levels in the past few weeks, indicating that La Niña may be re-emerging for a third consecutive year. 

Today’s La Niña Alert from the Bureau means that there is a 70 percent chance that they will declare a La Niña event in the coming months. 

The increasing likelihood of La Niña is also being closely monitored by other international climate agencies, including the U.S. climate Prediction Centre (CPC) and the Japanese Meteorological Agency (JMA). However, it is worth noting that both the CPC and JMA use different thresholds than the BoM to define La Niña. So, while the BoM declared the end of La Niña in June 2022, the JMA and CPC have both classified an ongoing La Niña through the middle of this year, which is now gaining more strength.  

Regardless of the definition used to classify La Niña, all signs are now pointing towards a re-emerging La Niña pattern in the Pacific Ocean. This trend if likely to continue in the months ahead, with the BoM, NOAA and JMA all giving a 60 to 80 percent chance of La Niña occurring during Southern Hemisphere’s spring. 

MicrosoftTeams-image (539)

Image: El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) forecast for the next 9 months, according to the U.S. CPC/IRI. The blue bars show the probability of La Niña occurring during each three-month period, with grey and red bars representing the probability of neutral and El Niño, respectively. Source: CPC/IRI 

Untitled

Image: ENSO forecast for November 2022 from seven different international models, based on the Nino-3.4 temperature anomaly. Source: Bureau of Meteorology, issued on August 16. 

 MicrosoftTeams-image (538)

Image: the JMA’s ENSO forecast for the rest of 2022, with a 60 percent chance of La Niña over the coming months. Source: JMA, issued on August 10.

La Niña increases the likelihood of above average rain and below-average daytime temperatures over large areas of northern and eastern Australia during spring. With the landscape still holding a lot of water from the first half of 2022, flooding will be an elevated risk over eastern and southeastern Australia in the next few months. 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.

High tropical cyclone risk near northern Australia this week

A tropical low currently developing over the Timor Sea has a high chance of becoming a tropical cyclone later this week, with a possibility of landfall somewhere in the Northern Territory or Western Australia. Key industries could be impacted including Ports, Mining, Transport, and Agriculture. The satellite images below show cloud circulating around the developing […]

Madden-Julian Oscillation increasing tropical cyclone potential for northern Australia industries

Sea surface temperatures exceeding 31°C off the coast of northern Australia and an active phase of the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) are increasing the likelihood of early-season tropical cyclone activity, with hints of the season’s first tropical cyclone coming as early as next week. Tropical cyclones require sea surface temperature of 26.5°C or warmer to develop, […]

Tropical cyclone season begins with warm oceans surrounding northern Australia

The 2025-26 tropical cyclone season has begun with abnormally warm oceans surrounding northern Australia, signalling an increased risk for severe tropical cyclones in the coming months. The Australian tropical cyclone season runs from November 1 to April 30. During this six-month period, there are usually about 9 to 10 tropical cyclones in the Australian region, […]

7.8 million lightning pulses detected by DTN’s Total Lightning Network over Australia in one week

A barrage of thunderstorms battered large areas of eastern and northern Australia over the past week, producing close to 8 million lightning pulses across the country and more than 4 million over Queensland alone. DTN’s Total Lightning Network (TLN) detected around 7.79 million lightning pulses above Australia last week. This lightning was observed over every […]