Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

Lola now earliest Category 5 Southern Hemisphere tropical cyclone on record

Tropical Cyclone Lola has become the earliest Category 5 tropical cyclone to form in the Southern Hemisphere on record as it bears down on Vanuatu.

Tropical Cyclone Lola first developed on Sunday evening in Fiji’s Area of Responsibility and has since quickly intensified. Just 36 hours after its initial development it is now classified as a Category 5 tropical cyclone, the highest category, with wind speeds of 215km/h, gusting up to 260km/h.

Severe Tropical Cyclone Lola is the earliest Category 5 tropical cyclone to form, not only in the South Pacific basin, but the whole Southern Hemisphere during the Southern Hemisphere season (July to June). The previous record holders are: 

  • Tropical Cyclone Joan in 1975 and Tropical Cyclone Graham in 1991 became Category 5 on the 5th December, both in Australia’s region 
  • In the South West Indian Ocean, the earliest Category 5 (named ‘Very Intense Tropical Cyclones’) was Tropical Cyclone Ambali on December 6th 2019 
  • Tropical Cyclone Yasa was the previous earliest for the South Pacific on December 15th 2020

So Tropical Cyclone Lola has beaten the previous Southern Hemisphere record by 42 days.

Tropical Cyclone Lola has formed a clearly visible eye and is a near perfect annulus (‘doughnut’ shape) indicating it is a fully mature and very strong system. It was able to strengthen so quickly mainly due to its small size, but was certainly aided by near-perfect conditions of very warm waters, high moisture, low wind shear, and good outflow, allowing it to develop uncontested.

Tropical Cyclone Lola is expected to track southwest, putting it on course for a direct hit on Vanuatu around 6am AEDT on Wednesday (Vanuatu time is also AEDT at this time of year). This could be one of the strongest tropical cyclones on record to make landfall over the Pacific Island nation. Some areas are already experiencing gales on the western side of the system. Official warnings and tracks issued by the Fiji Met Service can be seen here.

Image: Forecast sustained winds as Tropical Cyclone Lola makes landfall over the Vanuatu archipelago from Access-TC

From there, it is expected to make more of a southerly track towards New Caledonia and could make landfall there also. However, it will be moving into an area that is unfavourable for sustaining its current strength, with relatively cool waters and wind shear that will tear the system apart. It is now unlikely that Lola will move into Australia’s region.

Tropical cyclones developing during October is unusual, given that the official tropical cyclone season runs from November to April each year, but they are not unprecedented. What is unusual is how strong this system has become, with very few systems ever making it to a severe tropical cyclone (Category 3 or higher) out of the normal season.

What has certainly aided this record-breaking tropical cyclone is an active El Niño. While El Niño decreases the number of tropical cyclones forming in the Australian region, it increases them in the South Pacific. This is due to the warmer than normal waters residing further east than usual, as well as the South Pacific Convergence Zone shifting to the northeast. As seen in the table below, Australia usually sees about 2.4 fewer (-25%) tropical cyclones in El Niño years, while the South Pacific sees 2.5 more (+38%) on average.

With such a significant system, we will keep up to date on the latest developments at Weatherzone.

Tropical Cyclone briefings have started for the upcoming 2023-24 season. For a detailed tropical cyclone outlook briefing for your region, as well as coverage on wet season rainfall and temperatures, 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.

Record dry start to year for South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania

Parts of South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania just endured their driest start to a year on record as a lack of early autumn rain worsened drought conditions in parts of all three states. High pressure systems have been dominating the weather patterns near southern Australia in recent months. These stubborn areas of high pressure, which […]

NEM’s highest solar generation ever

The National Energy Market (NEM) recorded its highest solar energy generation over the past summer as high pressure dominated southeastern Australia. Australia’s NEM has continued to implement more and more renewable energy sources into its network. Combined with favourable weather, both the summer of 2024-25 and the last quarter (January to March 2025) saw record […]

Indian heatwave relief on the way

Rain and thunderstorms are expected to spread over heatwave affected parts of northern India and Pakistan in the coming days, bringing much needed relief to people and infrastructure. Northwest India and Pakistan have been scorched by intense heat reaching well into the 40s over the past two weeks. The capital of India, New Delhi, had […]

Positive SAM and warm oceans dominate Australia’s winter outlook

The Pacific and Indian Ocean climate drivers remain in a neutral phase, with weather around Australia continuing to be dominated by more local effects. Pacific Ocean climate driver The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has returned to a truer neutral phase, after trending towards a La Niña-like phase during summer. Sea Surface Temperatures (SST) across […]