100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Warmer winter 'almost guaranteed' for Coast as global trend continues

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Man injured after car crashes into house

A man has been taken to hospital after the SUV he was driving crashed into a house in the early hours of Tuesday morning. The More

Dual 55m towers proposed next to major shopping hub

Plans for a twin-tower development with 258 units next to the Sunshine Coast’s largest shopping centre have been lodged for assessment. The proposal includes a More

Noosa to Nambour: every suburb’s median house value revealed

House prices in almost every Sunshine Coast town and suburb have soared above $1 million, according to fresh real estate data. The median house cost More

Nurse loses court challenge to vaccine suspension

A nurse has failed in a Supreme Court bid to overturn her suspension over vaccination requirements by challenging its “constitutional validity”. The woman, who worked More

New officers to bolster frontline policing

New police have officers have been deployed to stations around Queensland, including the Sunshine Coast. Seventy-nine new officers have been sworn into the Queensland Police More

‘Dreaming of this moment’: Ironwoman savours series win

A Sunshine Coast surf life saver is celebrating a dream come true after winning her first Iron Series title. Tiarnee Massie finished atop the women's More

The Bureau of Meteorology has presented its long-range forecast for the Sunshine Coast.

The weather experts expect warmer and possibly wetter than usual conditions in the region from June to August.

The first week of winter could include some cool mornings with a westerly wind but senior meteorologist Harry Clark told Sunshine Coast News that temperatures could otherwise be relatively high.

“It’s a stark story,” he said.

“The Sunshine Coast and indeed the entire of Australia is almost guaranteed a warmer than average winter.”

“There’s an 80 per cent chance of exceeding the average minimum and maximum temperatures (9.7 and 21.2 degrees Celsius) over the next few months.”

It’s expected to be warmer than usual this season. Picture: BOM.

“That’s not to say we won’t get the odd cold night, but temperatures should come in above average.”

There’s a slim possibility of breaking the region’s highest recorded winter minimum and maximum marks (19.4 degrees Celsius in 2002 and 35 in 2009).

“You couldn’t rule it out,” Mr Clark said.

“You’d need a fair bit of heat to build up in central Australia and get dragged across.

“Above-average temperatures skew the odds. It’s a lot easier to break warm records than cold ones.”

For what it’s worth, the region’s lowest minimum winter temperature was -0.6 degrees Celsius in 2007 and its lowest maximum was 12.4 in 2005, keeping in mind that figures have only been collected at Sunshine Coast Airport since 1994.

Mr Clark said this winter’s expected warmer conditions could generally be attributed to rising sea surface temperatures driven by climate change.

Temperatures during winter – indeed in all seasons – are expected to keep gradually rising in years to come.

“The oceans are so warm, and the Earth has heated up during the past few decades. We’re breaking warm records at a much faster rate than we’re breaking cold records,” Mr Clark said.

There should be average or slightly above average rainfall. Picture: BOM

There’s also the possibility of a wetter winter on the Sunshine Coast.

“(The forecast) is generally leaning to slightly above average rainfall during the next few months,” Mr Clark said.

There’s a 55 to 60 per cent chance the region will get more than 226mm, and a 28 per cent chance of unusually wet conditions.

Mr Clark said the BOM was also monitoring for the possible development of La Nina, which is commonly associated with wetter conditions, later this year.

Do you have an opinion to share? Submit a Letter to the Editor at Sunshine Coast News via news@sunshinecoastnews.com.au. You must include your name and suburb.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share