Australia records driest October since 2002 due to El Nino

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The Bureau of Meteorology said October was Australia's driest October since 2002.

The Bureau of Meteorology said October was Australia's driest October since 2002.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Australia recorded the driest October in more than 20 years due to an El Nino weather pattern which has seen hot, dry conditions hit crop yields in one of the world’s largest wheat exporters, the national weather bureau said on Wednesday.

The Bureau of Meteorology said October was Australia’s driest October since 2002, with rainfall 65 per cent below the 1961 to 1990 average.

It said every part of Australia except the state of Victoria had below-average rainfall and Western Australia state – by far the biggest grain-exporting region – saw its driest October on record.

After three years of plentiful rain, the

El Nino weather phenomenon

has brought hot and dry weather to Australia, with September the driest since records began in 1900.

Rain in some parts of the country in early October halted a rapid decline in projected crop yields but the country’s wheat harvest is still expected to fall by around 35 per cent in 2023 to some 26 million tonnes.

“Areas of (rainfall) deficiency have generally expanded and become more severe in south-west Western Australia, south-eastern Queensland, and parts of the Top End in the Northern Territory and far north Queensland. Deficiencies eased in southern Victoria and eastern Tasmania,” the bureau said.

Its long-range forecast predicts below-median rainfall through to at least January in northern, western and southern Australia. REUTERS

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