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Showers and storms are occurring in the NT's far northern Top End & QLD's far north in unstable easterly winds. Showers are scattering across southern NSW with a front. Showers across southern Vic & central & southern SA in southerly winds behind the front.

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Late ShowerSydneyNSW

21.4°C

13°C
22°C

Showers EasingMelbourneVIC

16.2°C

13°C
18°C

Mostly SunnyBrisbaneQLD

26.6°C

18°C
28°C

SunnyPerthWA

23.2°C

17°C
31°C

Mostly SunnyAdelaideSA

17.1°C

13°C
20°C

Late ShowerCanberraACT

15.8°C

5°C
18°C

Clearing ShowerHobartTAS

14.8°C

10°C
18°C

Mostly SunnyDarwinNT

31.2°C

26°C
35°C

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Today, 12:07AM UTC

Southerly surges across the southeast

It's a chilly and showery end to the working week across southeastern Australia, after a strong surge of south to southeasterly winds pushed cool air across the region overnight. Melburnians awoke to some welcome rain with 6 mm in the gauge in the 24 hours to 9 am, most of it falling around dawn. After our story yesterday about the desperately dry start to 2024 in Tasmania, Hobart also saw a drop or two overnight with 1 mm in the city and 6.6 mm up on kunanyi/Mt Wellington where it was almost but not quite cold enough for snow, dropping to a minimum of 1.4°C. Those sorts of moderate rainfall totals obviously won't alleviate the severe rain deficiency for the year to date, but it was better than nothing. The map below shows rainfall across Australia to 9 am Friday, with showers right across Tasmania and most of Victoria, coastal and northern NSW, and parts of Queensland. Source: BoM. The synoptic chart below shows a cold front east of Tasmania that stayed south of the mainland, but as mentioned, there's enough cool air circulating around that high centred over the Great Australian Bight to give the southeast of the country a distinctly autumnal feel. Anyone taking the kids for some school holiday hiking in the high country will definitely feel the chill today, with predicted maximums of just 5°C for Mt Hotham in Victoria and the same for Thredbo Top Station in NSW, the starting point for the popular Mt Kosciuszko walk. Meanwhile as we write this story around 10 am on Friday morning, Sydney is mild and sunny and approaching 20°C under the influence of westerly winds but by lunchtime, a southerly change will blow into town making things feel a lot cooler. Sydneysiders got a bit of a surprise on Thursday with the severity of thunderstorms that whipped through the city in the early afternoon. The potential for storms was always on the cards yesterday, but the speed with which they developed and the hail in some suburbs caught many residents off guard. #Sydney being hammered by rogue hail storm… pic.twitter.com/tiUH6zsA4v — Chris Mitchell (@chrismbbcsport) April 18, 2024 Some showers will accompany the southerly to Sydney this Friday afternoon and stick around for 24 hours or so before clearing by Sunday. In Melbourne, the clearing pattern has already begun and a cool but mostly fine weekend looms ahead.

18 Apr 2024, 3:20AM UTC

Generation gone with the wind

A weeklong stretch of low wind power was broken on Wednesday evening, as a weak cold front marched across southern Australia.  The chart below shows that the National Electricity Market (NEM) has endured a weeklong stretch of low wind generation, with wind power providing around 6% of the NEM’s electricity, down from last year’s average of 13.1% (Mon, April 15 to Wed, April 17).    The daily wind generation has been under 41 GWh/day for the last seven days leading up to Thursday, April 18. The calmest winds occurred on Sunday, April 14 with only 24 GWh/day produced or 4.6% of grid demand.   To put this in perspective, the average daily wind generation during the last year up to Wednesday, April 17, 2024, was 71 GWh/day, according to data from the open NEM.  This prolonged period of low wind was caused by blocking high pressure systems sitting over southern Australia, forcing cold fronts or strong wind further south.  The image below shows the Mean Sea Level Pressure chart on the calmest day, Sunday, April 14, with high pressure stubbornly sitting over the southern half of the country.  Image: Mean Sea Level Pressure Analysis at 4am AEST on Sunday, April 14. Source: Bureau of Meteorology.  As we mentioned earlier today, a positive Southern Annular Mode (SAM) has led to consistent high pressure systems positioned over latitudes well south of Australia during the first three months of the year and during this week. This has kept cold fronts south of the mainland, and even south of Tasmania.   READ MORE: WHAT IS THE SAM?   The period of light winds ended abruptly on Wednesday evening, with WattClarity reporting that wind production peaking above 3,000 MW at 9:10pm AEST.  The increased wind power on Wednesday night, was caused by a couple of factors;  A weak cold front swept across the southeast on Wednesday, bringing stronger winds.  A very shallow temperature inversion formed in the early evening protecting the surface from the stronger winds, but the wind turbine hub-height (150 metres above the ground) winds remained strong at around 28-38 km/h in SA.  Temperature inversions form at night when the ground cools quicker than the air above it, meaning that the temperature increases with height for a thin layer of the atmosphere.   During autumn, the temperature inversions are commonly shallow meaning that while the wind could be weak at the surface, the hub heights could continue to experience strong winds.  A similar phenomenon could happen again tonight across southern Australia, with another cold front passing across the south.  Looking ahead, light winds are expected to continue from Friday as a stubborn high-pressure system builds over the Bight until early to mid-next week.   

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18 Apr 2024, 1:29AM UTC

Devilishly dry in Tasmania

Tasmania has had an exceptionally dry start to 2024, with rainfall deficiencies across the entire state as of mid-April. Take a look at the chart below. It shows the rainfall anomalies from January 1 to April 17 – or in other words, the amount of rainfall relative to the running average. As you can see, no part of the state has had more rain than the long-term average to date in 2024. Source: BoM. A quick glance at the map above might lead you to think that the southwest corner of the state has had the least rain. That's not true. It's actually one of the wettest parts of Australia, so while it is hundreds of millimetres down on the running average, the east has actually been drier both in real terms and relative terms. That's illustrated in the rainfall deciles chart below which covers the period from January 1 to the end of March. Source: BoM. Hobart is very much in the red zone, and its monthly rainfall over the last 12 months is depicted in the graph below. Just two of the last 12 months exceeded the average rainfall, and not by much. February and March 2024 were exceptionally dry months, with less than 10 mm of accumulated rainfall in both months. Why so dry? The positive Southern Annular Mode (SAM) has led to consistent high pressure systems positioned over latitudes well south of Australia. This has kept cold fronts south of the mainland, and even south of Tasmania. READ MORE: WHAT IS THE SAM? Turning of the Fagus? How passé. Down here in the Huon we’ve got the Turning of the Gums. ???? pic.twitter.com/JPQN4TVUem — The Planker (@theRealPlanker) April 17, 2024 The chart below shows the mean sea level pressure (MSLP) anomalies from January through to the end of March. Orange means higher pressure than the average, blue means lower pressure than the average. Long story short, the intense cold fronts south of Tasmania have been blocked from moving further north by the consistent highs. Source: climatereanalyzer.org. As for the week ahead, expect only very light showers here and there across the state with dry conditions prevailing in most places, although the west coast should see an increase in shower activity into the new week.

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18 Apr 2024, 3:20AM UTC

Generation gone with the wind

A weeklong stretch of low wind power was broken on Wednesday evening, as a weak cold front marched across southern Australia.  The chart below shows that the National Electricity Market (NEM) has endured a weeklong stretch of low wind generation, with wind power providing around 6% of the NEM’s electricity, down from last year’s average of 13.1% (Mon, April 15 to Wed, April 17).    The daily wind generation has been under 41 GWh/day for the last seven days leading up to Thursday, April 18. The calmest winds occurred on Sunday, April 14 with only 24 GWh/day produced or 4.6% of grid demand.   To put this in perspective, the average daily wind generation during the last year up to Wednesday, April 17, 2024, was 71 GWh/day, according to data from the open NEM.  This prolonged period of low wind was caused by blocking high pressure systems sitting over southern Australia, forcing cold fronts or strong wind further south.  The image below shows the Mean Sea Level Pressure chart on the calmest day, Sunday, April 14, with high pressure stubbornly sitting over the southern half of the country.  Image: Mean Sea Level Pressure Analysis at 4am AEST on Sunday, April 14. Source: Bureau of Meteorology.  As we mentioned earlier today, a positive Southern Annular Mode (SAM) has led to consistent high pressure systems positioned over latitudes well south of Australia during the first three months of the year and during this week. This has kept cold fronts south of the mainland, and even south of Tasmania.   READ MORE: WHAT IS THE SAM?   The period of light winds ended abruptly on Wednesday evening, with WattClarity reporting that wind production peaking above 3,000 MW at 9:10pm AEST.  The increased wind power on Wednesday night, was caused by a couple of factors;  A weak cold front swept across the southeast on Wednesday, bringing stronger winds.  A very shallow temperature inversion formed in the early evening protecting the surface from the stronger winds, but the wind turbine hub-height (150 metres above the ground) winds remained strong at around 28-38 km/h in SA.  Temperature inversions form at night when the ground cools quicker than the air above it, meaning that the temperature increases with height for a thin layer of the atmosphere.   During autumn, the temperature inversions are commonly shallow meaning that while the wind could be weak at the surface, the hub heights could continue to experience strong winds.  A similar phenomenon could happen again tonight across southern Australia, with another cold front passing across the south.  Looking ahead, light winds are expected to continue from Friday as a stubborn high-pressure system builds over the Bight until early to mid-next week.   

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03 Apr 2024, 4:35AM UTC

Solar booms as Adelaide records sunniest March in 30 years

Southern Australia saw an abundance of clear skies during March, causing rooftop solar to soar to new heights.  The run of sunny days was caused by blocking high pressure systems that prevented cloud and rain bearing cold fronts from sweeping across southern Australia.   The clear skies led to Melbourne recording its driest March on record with a measly 2.8mm total, beating the previous record of 3.7mm in March 1934. Adelaide was also dry, recording 27 days without a drop of rain, while Sydney picked up 52.5mm of rain and Brisbane 152.8mm.   Across the four major NEM capital cities:  Melbourne saw its sunniest March in 18 years, with an average of 8.5 hours of sunlight each day.  Adelaide recorded the sunniest March since 1994, averaging 10.4 hours of sunshine per day.  Sydney observed an average of 7 hours of sunlight per day, which is the most sun hours the city has seen in two years.  Brisbane was the cloudiest of these cities with only 5.7 hours of sunshine on average per day, consistent with above average rain falling in the city.   The lack of cloud and rain across southern Australia led to increased rooftop solar output across the region in March 2024.   Data from OpenNEM shows that rooftop solar in Victoria was the highest on record this March since rooftops installations begun in 2007. The graphs below show the warm season rooftop solar contribution to the National Electricity Market (NEM).  Images: Warm season (October- March) rooftop solar power (GW/h). Data sourced: OpenNEM, AEMO, APVI.  The rising trend in the graph above for VIC looks remarkably similar for SA, with March 2024 producing 294 GWh / month across the state, compared to 252 GWh / month from March 2023.  The graph also highlights that the total solar generation has been increasing year-on-year since 2018, driven by a boom in solar installations across Australia.  The Clean Energy Council reported that in 2023, renewable energy supplied a record 39.4% of Australia's electricity, led by wind's 13.4% share. Rooftop solar cracked a 10% share for the first time, reaching 11.2% ahead of solar farms at 7% and hydro's 6.5% share.  During March 2024, rooftop solar across SA supplied 24.5% of SA’s energy needs, the largest in the NEM. Meanwhile renewable energy contributed 77% of SA’s power, with wind taking the lead with a 43.5% contribution.  Image: March contribution to renewables in SA, Vic, NSW, Qld, Data sourced: OpenNEM, AEMO, APVI.  Rooftop solar is the leading renewable across NSW and Qld, contributing between 11 and 12 percent to the state's energy needs, followed by solar farms then wind.  Weatherzone Business and Solcast are a market-leading partnership delivering highly specialised solar data to the Australian renewable energy industry.  Designed for utility scale solar sites, we offer you a globally proven solution.  With low upfront CAPEX and powerful cloud-based information systems, you can access a complete suite of irradiance and weather data to ensure forecast accuracy and improve site efficiency.  Solcast is the world leader in real-time actuals and rapid-update solar forecasts. This solution utilises Solcast’s centralised Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) cloud infrastructure for all complex algorithmic processes and data plumbing. You will gain the power of AWS to interpret and deliver your data at top speed, providing real-time, historical and forecasting estimates direct to your API.  Receive monitoring and support from the Weatherzone and Solcast teams, 24/7. For more information, please contact us at business@weatherzone.com.au.  

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