The sun rises in Sydney, NSW. Drier weather conditions are expected to be concentrated in NSW and
Queensland in May, June and July 2026 due to
El Niño. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian View image in fullscreen The sun rises in Sydney, NSW. Drier weather conditions are expected to be concentrated in NSW and
Queensland in May, June and July 2026 due to
El Niño. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian
Australia’s south-east set for drier and hotter winter as BoM forecasts potential
El Niño Queensland and NSW set for lower than usual rainfall in May, June and July, while temperatures in most of the country likely to be higher than normal Follow our
Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Large parts of south-east
Australia look set for drier and hotter conditions over the next three months as a potential
El Niño weather phenomenon takes shape in the Pacific Ocean. Much of
Queensland and
New South Wales are forecast to have lower than usual rainfall in May, June and July, with almost the entire country likely to experience hotter than average maximum temperatures. The World Meteorological Organization said last week there was an increasing chance of an
El Niño developing in the Pacific – a phenomenon that historically has increased the chances of hotter and drier conditions for
Australia’s east.
El Niño events also tend to push up global temperatures, with some climate experts saying an event later this year could help set global heat records in 2027. View image in fullscreen Areas in red are expected to see higher than average maximum temperatures from May to July. Illustration:
Bureau of Meteorology El Niño is characterised by warmer than usual ocean waters in the tropical Pacific and a weakening or reversal of easterly trade winds which can both keep cloud and rain away from
Australia’s east. The
Bureau of Meteorology has said there is still disagreement among weather models, but most show sea surface temperatures consistent with an
El Niño could be in place by July. Caitlin Minney, a climatologist at the
Bureau of Meteorology, said a developing
El Niño was likely one of the factors behind the dry forecast. “May to July looks like rainfall will likely be below average for much of eastern
Australia,” she said. While the drier conditions are expected to be concentrated in NSW and
Queensland, the forecast also suggests parts of northern and western Victoria, southern parts of South
Australia and the south-west of Western
Australia could also be dry. The bureau is also watching conditions in the Indian Ocean where some models are suggesting ocean temperatures to
Australia’s north-west could cool – another phenomenon that can lower the chance of rainfall over the continent. Dr Peter van Rensch, a climate scientist at Monash University, led a study last year into the affects of the cycle of warming and cooling in the Pacific – known as the
El Niño-Southern Oscillation – on Australian rainfall. He said
El Niño’s influence on Australian rainfall has historically been at its greatest in the months of June and July and October and November. “The pattern of the rainfall [in the bureau’s forecast] does look similar to what we would expect from the historical relationship with
El Niño. “A lot of the models are showing this [
El Niño] will be strong, but there’s a lot that can happen in Pacific that could change that,” he said. While there has been some commentary that a so-called “super
El Niño” could develop, the bureau warned last week forecasts at this time of year tended to be less reliable. View image in fullscreen Drier conditions from May to July are expected to be concentrated in NSW and
Queensland. Illustration:
Bureau of Meteorology The bureau also said the strength of an
El Niño did not necessarily mean the impacts of an event on
Australia’s rainfall would also be strong. Van Rensch said the impacts of
El Niño on
Australia can also be influenced by the location of the warmest waters in the Pacific. El Niños that were concentrated in the central Pacific, as opposed to further east, tended to have the strongest affects on
Australia. The bureau’s long-range forecast is also showing the bottom two-thirds of
Australia has an increased chance of unusually high maximum temperatures from May to July. “The climate change signal is coming through very strongly in our temperature forecasts,” said Minney. Global heating, caused by the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation, has warmed
Australia by about 1.5C since 1910. Explore more on these topics
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