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Showers & storms in WA's west, the NT's east, QLD's west & NSW's north & centre in unstable air. Showers are persisting on QLD's coast in humid onshore winds, mainly the north. A cold front is bringing a burst of brisk winds & showers to southern NSW, VIC, TAS & southern SA.

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Min

Max

RainSydneyNSW

17.1°C

16°C
22°C

Mostly CloudyMelbourneVIC

13.3°C

11°C
16°C

Possible ShowerBrisbaneQLD

20.3°C

16°C
25°C

Heavy ShowersPerthWA

19.4°C

16°C
20°C

Mostly SunnyAdelaideSA

12.7°C

10°C
18°C

Clearing ShowerCanberraACT

11.9°C

8°C
16°C

Possible ShowerHobartTAS

11.0°C

8°C
15°C

Mostly SunnyDarwinNT

32.0°C

24°C
35°C

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Weather in Business


Latest News


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Today, 4:34AM UTC

Australia's tropical cyclone season in satellite images

Images captured by the Himawari-9 satellite over the past six months show the entire 2023-24 Australian tropical cyclone season in all its glory from start to finish. The Himawari-9 satellite is a geostationary satellite that sits roughly 36,000 km above Earth’s surface, capturing images of the Australian region every 10 minutes, throughout the year. The video below shows the images captured by the Himawari-9 satellite over the past six months, from the start of November to the end of April. The images have been stitched together by Weatherzone to create a timelapse of the Australian 2023-24 tropical cyclone season. This video shows the entire 2023-24 Australian tropical cyclone season using enhanced infrared images from the Himawari-9 satellite. ????? pic.twitter.com/cTBpOR2OlL — Weatherzone (@weatherzone) April 30, 2024 In total, there were eight named tropical cyclones inside Australia’s area of responsibility during the 2023-24 season. This is slightly lower than the long-term average of 9 to 11 tropical cyclones per season. One thing that stood out as unusual about this season’s cyclones was that six out of the eight named tropical cyclones became severe (reaching category three or higher). This was the highest number of severe tropical cyclones during a single season since the 2014-15 season. While the season officially finishes at the end of April, tropical cyclones can develop in the Australian region at any time of year, although they become much less likely from June to October.

Today, 3:29AM UTC

Ruang volcano eruption causes explosion of lightning

Indonesia’s Ruang volcano erupted early on Tuesday morning, sending a towering column of ash and lightning high into the night sky. After a period of inactivity following a separate eruption earlier this month, the Ruang volcano experienced a powerful eruption on Tuesday, April 30, 2024. The satellite animation below shows a large mass of clouds and ash rapidly developing above the volcano following the eruption. Video: Visible satellite images from the Himawari-9 satellite, showing the eruption occurring at night before the rising sun illuminates the cloud created by the volcano. Source: RAMMB/CIRA Weatherzone’s Total Lightning Network detected around 14,000 lightning pulses within a 200 km radius of the volcano during the six-hour period following the eruption. Most of this lightning occurred directly above the volcano within the first three hours after the eruption. According to the Darwin Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre at the Bureau of Meteorology, volcanic ash was reaching around 63,000 feet (19.2 km) into the sky on Tuesday, with the volcanic ash cloud moving towards the west northwest of the summit. Enhanced Himawari-9 satellite imagery shows this west to northwest movement of the volcanic ash cloud following Tuesday’s eruption. Video: Enhanced ‘ash’ satellite imagery and lightning observations showing the movement of the lightning-active Ruang Volcano plume on Tuesday, April 30, 2024. According to Reuters, most residents from the island of Ruang had already been evacuated following a separate eruption earlier in April.

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Today, 3:08AM UTC

NSW soaking has begun

Rain has begun falling across parts of NSW and it is here to stay for a while, with the potential for hundreds of millimetres to fall along the central NSW coastline.   The image below shows thick cloud, rain and thunderstorms stretching from northwest NSW through to the central coastline on Tuesday afternoon. A line of thunderstorms is also lingering off the Hunter coastline this afternoon.     Image: Himawari satellite image at 12:20 AEST on Tuesday, April 30.  The rain and thunderstorms are forming along a coastal trough near the Hunter and an inland trough sitting through Qld and NSW’s interior.   Rainfall could fall each day in some areas of NSW for the next 7 to 10 days, as a stubborn high-pressure system causes a prolonged period of moisture-laden easterly winds to feed into NSW. These easterly winds are particularly humid because the Tasman Sea is unusually warm causing the atmosphere above the ocean to be humid.   Rainfall is set to intensify over NSW and southern Qld later this week as this moisture interacts with an upper-level cut-off low.  There is some uncertainty about the upper-level low's position and the resulting rainfall towards the end of the week. The map below shows one computer model's forecast position of the upper-level low will be in western NSW on Friday evening. The blue shades over eastern NSW show excessive amounts of precipitable water or a large water content in the atmosphere which can be rained out.       Image: 500hPa height and precipitable water at 10pm AEST on Friday, May 3, according to ECMWF There is agreement between the forecast models that largest totals will fall across eastern NSW, but western and central NSW and southern Qld should see one or two days of decent rain.   The maps below show three different computer models forecast rainfall in the next week, with the potential for 100-150mm to fall in areas of the central and northern NSW coastline. You can also see that two models are predicting substantial rainfall to fall over western NSW, with the potential for 60-80mm to fall in parts during the next week.        Images: Accumulated weekly rainfall forecast to 10pm on Monday, May 6, according to ECMWF (top), GFS (middle) and ACCESS (bottom).  You can see in the images above that there is still some uncertainty around where the heaviest rainfall will be along the east coast in the next 7 days. This is due to the models differing position of the surface level low which could form later this week off the NSW coast, with the heaviest rainfall expected to fall along the southern flank of the low.   Models are suggesting that the heaviest rainfall should fall over the weekend in eastern NSW. Flooding is a risk in NSW over the weekend, especially because the heavy rainfall will be falling over a sodden landscape with rainfall expected each day in the lead up to the weekend.   We will be watching this event closely as it unfolds and please keep an eye out for the latest warnings here.  

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Weather in Business


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23 Apr 2024, 12:07AM UTC

Wind returning to southeastern Australia

After a prolonged period of light winds, a surge of powerful winds and cool air will push through southeastern Australia during the next 48 hours.  As we wrote about last week the National Electricity Market (NEM) saw very low wind power generation during the seven days leading up to Thursday, April 18, with the daily wind generation having been under 41 GWh/day for this period.  Wind power has improved slightly during the past week, with wind power increasing for a few days over last weekend. The chart below shows that the winds across the NEM have already increased in response to a cold front approaching SA and Vic on Tuesday.  The increase in wind power is associated with a cold front sweeping across southeastern Australia, after a stubborn high-pressure system forced many cold fronts south for over a week.  The map below shows the cold front marching across the Bight, approaching SA on Tuesday morning. You can also see a broad area of speckled cloud in the Bight, which is a tell-tale sign that a large mass of cold polar air has broken away from the Antarctic region and is venturing into the relatively warm mid-latitudes.      Image: Himawari-9 satellite image at 9:30am AEST on Tuesday, April 23.  Northwesterly winds will continue to strengthen ahead of the cold front on Tuesday in SA and Vic before a strong southwesterly change hits Adelaide on Tuesday afternoon and Melbourne in the evening.   The images below show the wind gust forecast for Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon.      Image: Instantaneous wind gust forecast at 1pm AEST on Tuesday (top) (bottom)and Wednesday, April 23 and 24, according to ECMWF  While most of this wind should hit the wind power ‘sweet spot’, cut outs could occur at southeastern Vic and southern NSW wind farms late Tuesday into Wednesday. Generally, cut outs occur when wind speeds exceed 90km/h (25 m/s), which is when the wind turbines are turned off to prevent damage.  In the image above you can see the front and associated southerly change moving up the NSW coast on Wednesday, hitting Sydney on Wednesday afternoon.   Winds will then become light later this week as another high-pressure system moves into the Bight.   Cool change coming  Ahead of this change, much of southeastern Australia has experienced pleasant autumnal weather, with Sydney’s temperature for the next two days reaching 27°C. However, there will be a large temperature contrast ahead and behind the cold front in the next few days. The image below shows forecast air temperatures around 1.5km above sea level on Wednesday morning, showing the cool airmass moving over parts of SA, VIC, Tas.      Behind the cold front strong southwesterly winds will cause temperatures to plummet to around 2-3°C below average across southern Australia;  Melbourne and Adelaide's temperature dropping to around 16-18°C for several days following the front.   Hobart’s temperature will drop from 22°C on Tuesday to 15°C on Wednesday.   Sydney’s temperature will go from 5°C above average on Wednesday to average on Thursday.  The coolest air will move over Tas, bringing snow to the alpine region there.   Looking ahead, temperatures will recover later this week ahead of another cold front and burst of wind power early next week. 

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18 Apr 2024, 3:20AM UTC

Generation gone with the wind

A weeklong stretch of low wind power was broken on Wednesday evening, as a weak cold front marched across southern Australia.  The chart below shows that the National Electricity Market (NEM) has endured a weeklong stretch of low wind generation, with wind power providing around 6% of the NEM’s electricity, down from last year’s average of 13.1% (Mon, April 15 to Wed, April 17).    The daily wind generation has been under 41 GWh/day for the last seven days leading up to Thursday, April 18. The calmest winds occurred on Sunday, April 14 with only 24 GWh/day produced or 4.6% of grid demand.   To put this in perspective, the average daily wind generation during the last year up to Wednesday, April 17, 2024, was 71 GWh/day, according to data from the open NEM.  This prolonged period of low wind was caused by blocking high pressure systems sitting over southern Australia, forcing cold fronts or strong wind further south.  The image below shows the Mean Sea Level Pressure chart on the calmest day, Sunday, April 14, with high pressure stubbornly sitting over the southern half of the country.  Image: Mean Sea Level Pressure Analysis at 4am AEST on Sunday, April 14. Source: Bureau of Meteorology.  As we mentioned earlier today, a positive Southern Annular Mode (SAM) has led to consistent high pressure systems positioned over latitudes well south of Australia during the first three months of the year and during this week. This has kept cold fronts south of the mainland, and even south of Tasmania.   READ MORE: WHAT IS THE SAM?   The period of light winds ended abruptly on Wednesday evening, with WattClarity reporting that wind production peaking above 3,000 MW at 9:10pm AEST.  The increased wind power on Wednesday night, was caused by a couple of factors;  A weak cold front swept across the southeast on Wednesday, bringing stronger winds.  A very shallow temperature inversion formed in the early evening protecting the surface from the stronger winds, but the wind turbine hub-height (150 metres above the ground) winds remained strong at around 28-38 km/h in SA.  Temperature inversions form at night when the ground cools quicker than the air above it, meaning that the temperature increases with height for a thin layer of the atmosphere.   During autumn, the temperature inversions are commonly shallow meaning that while the wind could be weak at the surface, the hub heights could continue to experience strong winds.  A similar phenomenon could happen again tonight across southern Australia, with another cold front passing across the south.  Looking ahead, light winds are expected to continue from Friday as a stubborn high-pressure system builds over the Bight until early to mid-next week.   

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