A deepening low-pressure system is set to bring a burst of dangerous weather to parts of eastern NSW as it moves towards the coast in the next 48 hours.
Rainfall has already begun to increase across parts of central eastern NSW early on Wednesday morning. While Sydney Observatory Hill only received 4.6mm between 12am and 9am on Tuesday, Whiteman Ridge in the Central Coast, Camden in Sydney and Foxground in Illawarra all had around 20-30mm of rain in one hour between 8am and 9am.
The map below shows the low-pressure system sitting off the northern coast of NSW on Wednesday morning, embedded within a low pressure trough that extends towards central NSW. The low pressure system is expected to drift southwest towards the central NSW coastline on Wednesday into Thursday.
Image: Mean Sea level pressure analysis chart, showing the synoptic setup over
As the low approaches the coast, rain, wind, and surf are all expected to intensify. This has prompted severe weather warnings for a broad stretch of the coast and ranges from about Eden up to Newcastle, with damaging surf and abnormally high tides also likely to extend up into the lower Mid North Coast.
A flood watch has also been issued for the Greater Sydney, Mid North Coast, Central Coast, Illawarra, South Coast and Queanbeyan areas.
The map below shows how much rain is being predicted by three different forecast models on Wednesday and Thursday combined. While the general pattern of rainfall is similar between these models, there ais disagreement in where the heaviest rain will fall. This is due to the models having trouble predicting where the low pressure system will move in the next 48 hours.
Rain and blustery winds will persist along the NSW coast and ranges from the Mid North Coast down to the South Coast, including Sydney, Newcastle and Wollongong during the rest of Wednesday. Heavier falls and potentially damaging winds should develop from the afternoon into the evening as the low pressure system moves closer to the coast. There could also be localised periods of intense rainfall if thunderstorms develop within this moist onshore flow.
Most models suggest that the low pressure system will approach and move over the central NSW coast on Wednesday night into Thursday morning. This would cause wind, rain and wave heights to increase further and may see six-hourly rainfall rates reaching around 50 to 100 mm, possibly even heavier in thunderstorms. However, there is considerable uncertainty around Thursday morning’s forecast rainfall, which is shown in the image below.
Image: Forecast accumulated rainfall during the six hours ending at 8am AEDT on Thursday, March 3.
Despite the uncertainty that remains around this East Coast Low, businesses between the lower Mid North Coast and the South Coast in NSW should closely monitor the forecasts and warnings over the next few days. For more information on Weatherzone’s rainfall forecasting and alerting, please contact us at business@weatherzone.com.au.