The Science Division of the Department of Science, Information Technology, Innovation and the Arts (DSITIA) considers that the probability of exceeding median rainfall for the rest of this year (October to December) and over summer (November to March) is below normal for most of Queensland. This means that there is a low probability of widespread drought-breaking rainfall across the state, leading into and over the coming summer. Read more (PDF, 329K, last updated 04:01PM, 14 October 2014)*
DSITIA’s rainfall outlooks for Queensland are based on the current and projected state of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon and on factors which alter the impact of ENSO on Queensland rainfall (i.e. the more slowly changing extra-tropical sea surface temperature (SST) pattern in the Pacific Ocean).
At this time of year the prevailing ENSO pattern (as measured by indices such as the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) or central equatorial Pacific Ocean SST anomalies) offers a useful basis for providing seasonal outlooks for spring and summer.
Values of the SOI, the key atmospheric measure of ENSO, have been negative for each of the last three months (July -4.0, August -10.1, September -6.6). In September, observed SSTs in the central equatorial Pacific warmed closer to, but remained below, El Niño thresholds.
Currently:
What if an El Niño event develops this year?
More than 75 per cent of Queensland remains drought declared under state government processes, including most inland regions and all of south-eastern Queensland. The possibility of an El Niño event developing, and with it the threat of another dry summer for some regions, poses a risk of current drought conditions becoming more protracted. This risk should be factored into decision- making and allocation of resources. In this context, DSITIA’s long-lead outlook for summer rainfall (next page) should be taken into consideration.
Outlook for summer rainfall
DSITIA scientists have shown that extra-tropical SST anomalies, when measured in specific regions of the Pacific Ocean in March, provide a useful basis for long-lead forecasting of summer rainfall in Queensland. This outlook can be modified, with increasing accuracy, as the monthly ENSO-related SST pattern is also taken into account from June to November.
This understanding has been incorporated in an experimental system known as SPOTA-1 (Seasonal Pacific Ocean Temperature Analysis version 1), which has been operationally evaluated by DSITIA scientists for over a decade.
Currently, DSITIA’s long-lead outlook for summer rainfall maintains a higher than normal probability of below-median rainfall for most of Queensland over the coming summer (November to March 2014/15) and, conversely, a low probability of widespread drought-breaking rainfall.
This outlook has been extremely consistent since April this year and is strongly related to the extra-tropical SST pattern detected in March this year, which is related to the Inter-decadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO). Although this outlook is not expected to change significantly before summer, the probability of below median summer rainfall could increase further should the gradient (west to east) across the South Pacific Convergence Zone (i.e. between eastern Australia and the central Pacific) become more negative during October (August +0.22 ºC, September -0.08 ºC). A final assessment of rainfall probabilities for the coming summer will be made in November.
In summary, it should be noted that:
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