Title: Effects of the 2006/7 El Ni
1Effects of the 2006/7 El Niño on Australian
climate and bushfire season
- Brad Murphy
- National Climate Centre
- Australian Bureau of Meteorology
2Outline
- ENSO impacts in Australia
- typical climate response to El Niño / La Niña
- 2006-7 El Niño in Australian region
- rainfall and temperature response
- impacts on water availability
- economic impacts
- Long-term drought in south eastern Australia
- Bushfires in south eastern Australia
- Impacts on 2006-7 Bushfire season
3Typical El Niño rainfall response
Jan Apr Jul Oct Jan Apr Jul
Oct Jan
4Previous Droughts and El Niño
2006
1994
2002
1982
1997
52006 Rainfall and Temp anomalies
30 of continent in decile 1 (Vic 93, Tas 74,
South Aus. 50) Alpine regions lowest on record
6Records broken in 2006
- SE Aust Tmax 1.93C (highest)
- Southern Aust 1.85C (highest)
- Record low minimum temperatures - severe,
damaging frosts - Major losses in the Goulburn Valley fruit crop
(25 Sept 2.7C at Wangaratta) - Crop losses in parts of SE Aus in Oct,
particularly to grapes (29 Oct 12.0C at
Charlotte Pass (NSW), new Australian record low
for Oct) - Examples of lowest annual rainfall on record
- Harrietville, Vic., 503 mm (opened 1884, mean
1435 mm, previous record 707 mm in 1982) - Burnie, Tasmania, 408 mm (opened 1944, mean 950
mm, previous record 670 mm in 1972)
7Seasonal Outlooks from 2006
Winter
Spring
Statistical Outcome POAMA
Model Dynamic
8Long-term drought
Last 10 years
Last 5 years
50 year trend
9Water storages/streamflows
Lowest recorded inflows into Murray River system
(40 of previous lowest record) Severe water
restrictions in many urban and rural centres
10Agricultural Production and Drought Assistance
11Major Past Bushfires in Victoria
- 1851 - 6 February 'Black Thursday
- 5,000,000 hectares burnt, 12 lives lost, 2000
buildings - 1926 - February March
- 60 lives lost
- 1939 - 13 January 'Black Friday
- 2,000,000 hectares, 71 deaths, 650 buildings
- 1944
- 15-20 deaths, 1 million hectares burnt
- 1983 - 16 February 'Ash Wednesday
- 100 fires, 47 deaths, 2000 houses lost
- 2003 - Eastern Victorian (Alpine) Fires
- 87 fires on 8 Jan, burnt for 59 days, 1.3 million
hectares, 41 homes lost - Significant but smaller-scale fires also in
- 1898, 1932, 1942-44, 1952, 1962, 1965, 1968-9,
1972, 1977, 1980, 1985, 1988, 1997
12Seasonal Bushfire Assessment 2006 - 2007
- Consensus assessment of bushfire potential in
upcoming season - Participants from NCC, Research Centre and
Regional Fire and Water Agencies - Modelled on U.S. National Seasonal Assessment
Workshops - Considers recent climate, seasonal climate
outlooks, current fuel loads and curing - Began in 2006, now split intoNorthern and
Southern fire seasons
Seasonal Fire Potential Outlook for 2006-7
Seasonal Fire Potential Outlook for 2007-8
13Tasmanian Bushfires October 2006
- Record lowest rainfall Jan-Oct (232mm Hobart
Airport - mean 402mm) - Record October max and min temps on 12th
(33.4C/17.0C at Hobart Airport, averages
17.3C/7.4C) - Gale force winds on 11th and 12th
- Extremely early start for fire season
- Worst fires since 1967
- No homes or lives lost
14Alpine Fires December 2006
MODIS Rapid Response Project at NASA/GSFC 5
December 2006
- Lightning ignited 83 fires on 1 Dec, merging
into one major complex - Longest fires in Victorian history (69 days)
- 1,048,000 hectares burnt (10480km²)
- 1 life lost (fire fighter - indirect)
- 51 dwellings destroyed
15Alpine Fires December 2006
- External fire-fighting resources brought in,
highest ever international deployments NSW
1,050, NT 108 - SA 10, Qld 14, WA 20
- Canada 52
- New Zealand 115
- USA 114
- Severe weather forecasting resources overloaded
- season began earlier (September)
- request made in September to US National Weather
Service for fire weather forecasters to be
deployed - 16 forecasters arrived in January (Melbourne,
Sydney, Hobart), invaluable in relieving
over-worked/stressed local forecasters
16FFDI f(Ts, V, RH, Drought Factor)
2006 10,480 km² Total area burnt 2003
13,000 km ² 1939 20,000 km²
17Climate Change and Bushfires
- Fire seasons are becoming longer and severe
seasons more frequent - Forest Fire Danger Index (FFDI) projected to
increase in southeast (except Tasmania) - More extreme fire days projected
- 5-25 (low) and 15-65 (high emissions) by 2020
- 10-50 (low) and 100-300 (high) by 2050
From N. Nicholls (2007)
From Lucas, et al. 2007
18Summary
- 2006 El Niño climate impacts typical for
Australia - Dry/hot conditions followed long-term drought and
warming trends - Impacts extreme, particularly on water resources
and agriculture - Extreme fire conditions forecast in August
- Major fires developed in Hobart (October) and
Victorian Alps (December-January) - Longest fires in Victorian history, largest area
burnt since 1939 - Resources stretched to limit, employments from
interstate and abroad, losses minimised - Fire seasons getting more frequent and likely to
become more severe