Wednesday, October 05, 2022

AUSTRALIA
Sydney sees wettest year on record



Some Australian communities are bracing for their fifth flood event in two years

By Tiffanie Turnbull
BBC News, Sydney


With 86 days left of 2022, Australia's biggest city - Sydney - has broken its annual rainfall record.


The city has received more than 2,200mm of rainfall since January, Australia's weather agency announced.

Widespread flooding across Australia - driven by a La Niña weather pattern - has already killed more than 20 people this year.

People in Sydney and elsewhere have been warned of immediate flood risks and to brace for another wet summer.

"We've seen a lot of rain around Sydney today, but it is only going to get worse," said New South Wales (NSW) Emergency Services Minister Steph Cooke on Thursday.

Sydney's previous rainfall record of 2,194mm was set in 1950.

More heavy rain and storms are forecast for the coming days but catchments are saturated, dams are full, and rivers are already swollen, the Bureau of Meteorology said.

That means many areas are primed for rapid flooding.

"Our message for the community in the coming days is prepare now," forecaster Gabrielle Woodhouse said.

"[This flooding] looks as though it's going to be more significant than what we have been seeing over the past 12 months."

Some areas in Sydney and its surrounds may be flooded, but communities in the NSW central west are most at risk, she said.

For some people in areas like the Hawksbury-Nepean, on the western fringe of Sydney, it will be the fifth flood event in less than two years.

Experts say the wet weather has been driven by climate change and the La Niña phenomenon.
Rare ‘triple dip’ La Niña declared
How Australia is becoming more unliveable

In Australia, a La Niña increases the likelihood of rain, cyclones and cooler daytime temperatures.

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