BoM - Bureau of Meteorology

11/23/2021 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/22/2021 21:34

Bureau of Meteorology declares La Nina underway

23/11/2021

The Bureau of Meteorology today declared a La Niña has developed in the Pacific Ocean.

La Niña is part of a cycle known as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), a naturally occurring shift in ocean temperatures and weather patterns along the equator in the Pacific Ocean.

During La Niña, waters in the central or eastern tropical Pacific become cooler than normal, persistent south-east to north-westerly winds strengthen in the tropical and equatorial Pacific, and clouds shift to the west, closer to Australia.

The Bureau's Head of Operational Climate Services, Dr Andrew Watkins, said that typically during La Niña events, rainfall becomes focused in the western tropical Pacific, leading to wetter than normal period for eastern, northern and central parts of Australia.

"La Niña also increases the chance of cooler than average daytime temperatures for large parts of Australia and can increase the number of tropical cyclones that form," Dr Watkins said.

"La Niña is also associated with earlier first rains of the northern wet season, as we've observed across much of tropical Australia this year.

"The last significant La Niña was 2010-12. This strong event saw large impacts across Australia, including Australia's wettest two-year periods on record, and widespread flooding.

"La Niña also occurred during spring and summer of 2020-21. Back-to-back La Niña events are not unusual, with around half of all past events returning for a second year."

Dr Watkins said that this year's event is not predicted to be as strong as the 2010-12 event and may even be weaker than in 2020-21 La Niña event.

"Every La Niña has different impacts, as it is not the only climate driver to affect Australia at any one time. That's why it is important not to look at it in isolation and use the Bureau's climate outlooks tools online to get a sense about likely conditions for the months ahead," Dr Watkins said.

The Bureau previously shifted to La Niña WATCH on 14 September 2021, and to La Niña ALERT on 12 October 2021. La Niña is likely to persist until at least the end of January 2022.

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