Typical of zombie comments from Oz is the one that says "Australia has always been dry. No news here"
Drought fears across southern Australia after months of below average rainfalls
Drought fears across southern Australia after months of below average rainfalls
Bureau
of Meteorology says the drought affecting Queensland and northern NSW
is edging south into Victoria and SA
7
October, 2014
Near-drought
conditions are spreading further across eastern Australia as summer
approaches.
The
Bureau of Meteorology’s latest
drought statement says
the big dry gripping northern NSW and Queensland is extending south,
with parts of Victoria recording their driest ever September and
widening long-term rainfall deficiencies in NSW, Victoria and South
Australia.
Source:
Bureau of Meteorology
“Particularly,
southern NSW, Victoria and NSW are beginning to see a sequence of
very dry months and as a result we are starting to see the emergence
of some rainfall deficiencies,” BoM climate monitoring and
prediction manager David Jones said.
“About
half of Victoria, for example, is currently experiencing serious or
severe rainfall deficiencies or just outside of that category, so we
are starting to see a large spatial extent of these deficiencies
further south.”
Jones
said all of southern Australia had below average rainfall in
September, save for some isolated good falls in the WA Goldfields
region and regions north of Perth.
The
Queensland coast north of Rockhampton had an improvement but much of
the state’s southeast and interior is suffering the effects of
prolonged dry conditions.
Jones
said relief from the ongoing dry conditions was unlikely.
“At
this stage, it doesn’t look like it. We’ve had increasing dry
over most areas as the year has gone on, and the seasonal outlook
suggests below average rainfall is pretty likely to continue in the
next three months,” he said.
“While
we always live in hope that we get some relief from the dry pattern,
the odds are definitely stacked against that.”
Dry
conditions and above average temperatures are expected to continue.
“It
has been yet another very warm year across Australia, and the warmth
adds to the dry,” Jones said.
The
above average temperatures are likely to continue at least until the
end of the year, he said.
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