More extreme rain has flooded 43 towns in New South Wales, 24 in Victoria and three in Tasmania and the abnormally wet conditions are expected to last until 2023

Environment 25 October 2022

Floods in the Melbourne suburb of Maribyrnong meant emergency workers were patrolling on 14 October to help evacuate residents

WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images

Eastern Australia is experiencing major flooding for the fifth time in 19 months due to record-breaking wet weather that is predicted to stretch into next year.

Across October, heavy downpours have flooded large swathes of New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania, resulting in four people dying, thousands of people being evacuated, homes and shops being inundated, and roads being cut off and damaged.

In New South Wales, the worst-affected state, 43 local government areas have now flooded, mostly in rural areas, with some floods spanning hundreds of kilometres.

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To try to limit the damage, over half a million sandbags have been dispatched in recent weeks. “We are quite literally sandbagging the state at present,” said Steph Cooke, emergency services minister for New South Wales, on 22 October.

The state was also badly hit by the four other major floods that have affected eastern Australia since early 2021, when the unusually wet conditions began. The widespread damage has made them the costliest floods in Australia’s history.

“By the time we get through this event, we have almost the entire state at some point in time that has been affected by a natural disaster of one form or another,” said New South Wales premier Dominic Perrottet at a press conference on 24 October.

Read more: Circular cities experience more rain than square or triangular ones

In Sydney, the state’s capital, a record-breaking 2.4 metres of rain has been recorded this year, which means about 3 million Olympic-sized swimming pools’ worth of water has fallen on the city. “We not only broke the record, we annihilated it,” said Tom Saunders, a meteorologist at national broadcaster ABC, on 22 October.

Several parts of Victoria and Tasmania have also received record rainfall in recent weeks, causing flooding in 24 local government areas in Victoria and three in Tasmania.

The 19 months of wet weather has primarily been driven by two large-scale weather systems originating in the oceans on either side of Australia, says Nina Ridder at the University of New South Wales in Sydney.

One is La Niña – a weather system arising in the Pacific Ocean that brings rain to Australia’s east coast. A rare grouping of three La Niña cycles in a row since late 2020 has meant “basically no stop in the wet conditions,” says Ridder.

The other is a weather system called the Indian Ocean Dipole, which occurs in the Indian Ocean and is currently in its negative phase, which brings more rain to south-eastern Australia.

Climate change may also be contributing because every extra 1°C of warming in the atmosphere means it can hold an extra 7 per cent of moisture that can then become rain, says Ridder.

Read more: The heat and drought in Europe will lead to a huge wave of tree deaths

“It will take time to quantify exactly how much human-caused climate change has influenced this specific event,” says David Karoly at the University of Melbourne.

The reason the past few weeks have been particularly wet is because a high-pressure weather system off Australia’s east coast has stopped rain clouds that have been sitting over the eastern states from moving offshore, says Ridder.

Eastern Australia should start to see drier conditions early next year when La Niña is predicted to end, she says. However, even small amounts of rain beyond that point could still cause more flooding because the ground is so saturated that it has limited capacity to soak up any more water, she says. “The whole system will need some time to reset and release all the additional water.”

The record-breaking floods come on the back of record drought, heat and wildfires that hit eastern Australia in 2019 and 2020. This is in line with government-commissioned modelling published in 2008 predicting that climate change would result in “longer dry spells broken by heavier rainfall events” in Australia.

“Climate change essentially means that extreme weather events are on steroids so they become more intense and frequent,” says Karoly.

The extremely wet conditions are in stark contrast to the hot, dry conditions across the US, Europe and China in recent months, which are also thought to be associated with climate change.

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