POWERING SMARTER WEATHER DECISIONS
Search

Unsettled weather is on its way

 

After a relatively benign April, unsettled weather is on its way for the opening week of May. 

Rain is expected to increase from next week foNSW and eastern Victoria, thanks to surface and upper-level low-pressure systems 

During the next week pockets of 80-100mm of rainfall along the South Coast of NSW are forecast by both the Australian (Access-G3) and European (ECmodels (figure 2) 

The computer models are having a hard time at discerning exactly where most of the rainfall will fall, due to some uncertainty in the position of a surface low 

The European model has the heaviest totals confined to the far southeastern coastline, while the Australian model has pockets of 80-100 mm extending right through to the Mid North Coast (figure 2). 

 

 

 

              

Figure 2: Australian model (Access-G) accumulated weekly rainfall up to Friday 7 May at 10am AEST 

So why is there so much rainfall on its way and why is there huge variance in the totals?  

A cut off low pressure system (low) in the upper levels of the atmosphere is signalled to move over NSW by Wednesday next week, 5 May. There is general model agreement in the position of the upper low next Wednesday morning, 5 May. 

The upper low is forecast to help a low-pressure system at the surface to develop, which may enhance the rainfall further particularly on the southern flank of the surface low 

The position of the surface low is uncertain at this stage, with varying rainfall totals seen throughout the models consequently (figure 2). 

Upper low-pressure systems have been known to generate dangerous weather conditions at the surface, such as gale force winds, heavy rainfall, large surf and severe storms. 

At this stage, heavy rainfall along the south coast of NSW and eastern VIC is expected to be the main outcome of the two systems. This is because the low-pressure system at the surface is signaled to be relatively weak and is not forecast to hang around the east coast for too long.  

Our meteorologists will be watching the models over the weekend, and we should start to get a clearer picture of how this weather event will unfold by early next weekFor more information please contact us at business@weatherzone.com.au 

Latest news

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

A very wet weekend for southeast Qld, northeast NSW

A prolonged rainfall event is set to bring large totals to parts of NSW and Qld from Saturday, with possible heavy falls and flooding.  A low-pressure system in the Coral Sea, a deepening coastal trough and persistent easterlies will bring moisture-laden air into southeast Qld and northeast NSW will bring days of rainfall to the […]

Southerly surges across the southeast

It’s a chilly and showery end to the working week across southeastern Australia, after a strong surge of south to southeasterly winds pushed cool air across the region overnight. Melburnians awoke to some welcome rain with 6 mm in the gauge in the 24 hours to 9 am, most of it falling around dawn. After […]

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 […]

BoM declares El Niño over

The Bureau of Meteorology has officially declared El Niño over and the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is now inactive for the first time since 2021, meaning there is no immediate sign of either an El Niño or a La Niña event. “El Niño has ended and the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has returned to neutral. Climate models […]