Meanwhile
New Zealand does its best to deny reality.
Rainfall
tallies plummet after Australia’s driest September on record –
“Below average rainfall covered almost the entire country”
Rainfall
deciles in Australia for September 2018, which was the driest
September in Australia overall on record. Graphic: BOMRainfall
deciles in Australia for the period 1 January 2018 - 30 September
2018. September 2018 was the driest September in Australia overall on
record. Graphic: BOM
3
October, 2018
By
Peter Hannam
1
October 2018
(The
Sydney Morning Herald) – Australia has notched its driest September
on record, with less than a third of the usual rainfall for the
month, extending the dry spell that has farmers and firefighters
increasingly desperate for rain.
Victoria
posted its second driest September, also collecting just a third of
its typical September rain.
NSW
also had another dry month, with less than half the normal rain,
bringing the state's year-to-date tally lower than any year but 1902
and 1965, according to Blair Trewin, senior climatologist at the
Bureau of Meteorology.
"Below
average rainfall covered almost the entire country" last month,
Dr Trewin said, adding that it pipped 1957 as the driest September,
and trailed only April 1902 as the driest for any month.
Melbourne
posted its fifth-driest September on record, with no days recording
more than 5 millimetres of rain – only the second time that's
happened for that month in records going back to 1855. […]
The
Murray-Darling Basin, Australia's food bowl, had its driest
January-September since 1902 – the end of the Federation Drought –
Dr Trewin said.
For
the rest of the year, the bureau's outlook suggests odds particularly
favour drier than average conditions in Victoria, southern South
Australia and Tasmania.
"The
signal in the outlook [for October to December] that's really strong
is warmth," Dr Trewin said, noting that almost all of the
country has an 80 per cent chance of warmer than usual maximum and
minimum temperatures. [more]
Rainfall
deciles for Victoria state in Australia, September 2018.
By
Rachel Eddie
1
October 2018
(The
New Daily) – Victoria has endured its driest September in more than
100 years, with Melbourne receiving just one-third of its usual
rainfall.
The
Bureau of Meteorology on Monday said it was the driest September
since 1914, or the second driest overall.
But
it wasn’t just Victoria waiting for rain. Australia had its driest
September on record as farmers down the east coast battle drought.
Dry
conditions also brought forward the bushfire season for parts of the
country.
Melbourne
had just 16.44mm for the month, or 35 per cent of the average at the
airport station.
Victoria
received 34 per cent its normal September rains, meaning the state
has now gone nine consecutive months of below-average rainfall.
Mildura
Airport recorded a total of just 0.8mm for the entire month, about 3
per cent of normal. […]
It
was Australia’s driest September on record, mostly as a result of
below-average rain in the south of the country. […]
The
monthly data comes as NSW and Queensland farmers battle drought.
The
October to December climate outlook, released by BOM on Thursday,
said eastern and southern Australia was likely to remain drier than
average.
That
would mean “a low chance of recovery for drought-affected areas of
eastern Australia”, BOM said. [more]
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