Published: 16:55, August 29, 2023 | Updated: 17:20, August 29, 2023
Aussie weather bureau: El Nino to develop between Sept and Nov
By Reuters

Vehicles cross over a flood control basin that has almost reached the street, Aug 20, 2023, in Palm Desert, Calif Scientists figure a natural El Nino, human-caused climate change, a stubborn heat dome over the nation's midsection, and other factors cooked up Hilary's record-breaking slosh into California and Nevada. (PHOTO / AP)

CANBERRA - Australia's weather bureau said on Tuesday that sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific were rising and an El Nino weather event, which typically brings hotter, drier weather, would likely develop between September and November.

READ MORE: El Nino causes more extreme weather in Australia

El Nino is associated with extreme weather phenomena, from wildfires to tropical cyclones and prolonged droughts.

The World Meteorological Organization said last month the weather pattern had emerged in the tropical Pacific for the first time in seven years.

Climate models indicate further warming of the central to eastern Pacific is likely, with SSTs remaining above El Nino thresholds until at least early 2024

But the Australian Bureau of Meteorology has not yet matched that call. It has issued an El Nino alert, which it says has historically led to the event around 70 percent of the time.

READ MORE: El Nino could doom Indonesia's rare tropical glaciers by 2026

"Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the tropical Pacific are exceeding El Nino thresholds and have continued to warm slightly over the last fortnight," the bureau said in a statement on its website.

"Climate models indicate further warming of the central to eastern Pacific is likely, with SSTs remaining above El Niño thresholds until at least early 2024."

READ MORE: Chinese researchers develop new AI model for El Nino predictions

However, the bureau said the 90-day Southern Oscillation Index (SOI), an indicator used to assess El Nino development, was below El Nino thresholds and that trade winds and Pacific cloudiness had not yet demonstrated sustained El Nino patterns.

"Overall, atmospheric indicators suggest the Pacific Ocean and atmosphere are not yet consistently reinforcing each other, as occurs during El Nino events," the bureau said.

El Nino typically suppresses spring rainfall in eastern Australia, which poses a risk to the region's wheat crop.

The Bureau maintained its long-range forecast of warmer and drier conditions across large parts of Australia from September to November.