Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

Drought gripping SA, Vic as failed ‘wet season’ draws to a close

Lacklustre rainfall over the past seven months has exacerbated drought conditions across large areas of SA and Vic, with Adelaide nearing the end of one of its driest ‘wet seasons’ on record.

The agricultural areas in SA and Vic typically receive most of their annual rainfall during the cooler months of the year between April and October. This rain typically comes from cold fronts and low pressure systems that come barrelling out of the southern Indian Ocean before sweeping across Australia from west to east.

These cold fronts and low pressure systems have been lacking in 2024, with abnormally high pressure being a dominant feature across southern Australia and the surrounding region over the past seven months.

Image: Mean sea level pressure anomaly for the period from April 1 to October 27, 2024, showing abnormally high pressure near southern Australia. Source: NOAA

This relentless high pressure anomaly near southern Australia has resulted in below average cool-season rainfall across large areas of SA, Vic and southern NSW.

Many cropping regions in SA and Vic received less than 60% of their average rainfall between April and October in 2024. This translates to more than 150 mm of missing seasonal rainfall in parts of both states, including some areas in southern NSW.

Image: Rainfall anomalies for the period from April 1 to October 29, 2024. Source: Bureau of Meteorology.

The latest crop and pasture report issued by South Australia’s Department of Primary Industries and Regions predicts that the state’s grain production in 2024/25 will be 35% below average and the lowest in six years.

Farmers aren’t the only ones feeling the absence of rainfall in the past seven months either. Adelaide only received 248 mm of rain between April 1 and October 30, which is about 110 mm below its long-term April-to-October average and its 6th lowest total on record for this period.

Some of the abnormally dry areas in SA and Vic were also highlighted in Australia’s latest seasonal bushfire outlook for their increased fire risk heading into summer.

The outlook noted that “fire authorities are advising communities of the potential for an early start to the fire season in parts of SA and Victoria, and extending to Tasmania if warm and dry conditions continue to dry out fuels towards summer.”

Looking ahead, there are no strong indications of above average rain or below average temperatures over southern Australia in November or December.

Working in often severe conditions in the high-risk fields of forestry and emergency, our consolidated weather services can ensure full situational awareness for you and your team.

DTN APAC serves the forestry and emergency sectors, delivering trusted weather data and severe weather alerting to maintain safety, protect your assets and underpin your planning.

Weatherzone’s trusted nowcasting and forecasting system, OpticastTM, is independently proven to outperform other industry models, allowing you to respond rapidly to changing conditions. Opticast can ingest data from your on-site weather observation equipment, ensuring your forecast is customised to your local microclimate. From nowcasting and 14 day forecasting to seasonal outlooks, you have powerful, hyper-local weather alerting and intelligence, giving you decisive confidence when it’s most needed.

With lightning a prominent cause of forest fires throughout Australia, Weatherzone’s Total Lightning Network offers real-time detection and unsurpassed accuracy of lightning strikes to <200m. Based on a vast sensor network, both intra-cloud and cloud-to-ground strikes are located, ensuring you are alerted when severe weather is building and threatening your teams, assets and infrastructure. When volatile conditions increase the ferocity of fire it’s imperative you have lead-time to enact safety plans, keeping your people out of harm’s way.

Your weather intelligence is accessible across all devices in your network via our Weatherguard App, and your customisable interface.

We are there for you when you need us the most – 24/7, 365 days a year. Please visit our website or email us at apac.sales@dtn.com.

Latest news

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

Big wintry week of rain, snow and frost for Australia’s energy market and hydropower

Rain, storms and winds will move over western WA, while two significant lows and cold fronts will send a deep chill, rain and snow driving energy demand across Tasmania and southeastern mainland Australia, in an unmistakeable sign that winter is now here. Southwest WA Perth appears set for its heaviest rain of 2025 to date […]

Unseasonable fire risk across Australia’s north and south this winter

Abnormally high fire risk is anticipated across parts of South Australia and Victoria this winter as the ongoing drought causes a seemingly endless 2025 fire season in southern Australia, with reduced risk across northern Australia with recent wet months. Increased Risk of Fire for southern Australia Australia’s official seasonal bushfire outlook for winter 2025 was […]

Possible negative IOD developing this winter

Warm sea surface temperatures near Indonesia are expected to heat up further over winter, possibly triggering a negative Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) event. What is the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD)? The IOD is an index that measures the difference in sea surface temperatures across the equatorial Indian Ocean. A negative IOD occurs when cooler-than-average water […]

Hydropower season wimpers to a start

Snow has fallen across Australia’s alpine region, and while it’s only a moderate amount, it’s a start for the peak hydropower season. Australia’s largest resort Perisher was claiming 15cm of settled snow on its snow stake, with slightly lower totals reported at other resorts, after a polar airmass briefly whipped through southeastern Australia on Tuesday […]