Official warning: El Nio declared

AFTER weeks of monitoring and assessment, the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) has officially declared an El Niño event.

This signifies that Australia faces a more certain – and probably protracted – hot and dry summer.

In addition to what that means for farmers and water supplies, it also brings the threat of a much higher bushfire risk as parts of eastern Australia are already recording record September highs.

Australia’s last El Niño event occurred during the summer of 2015-16.

Dr Karl Braganza from the BoM said meteorologists deferred the decision for a week waiting to see if the pattern was going to “settle” and confirmed it this week.

“This summer will be hotter than average and certainly hotter than the past three years,” Mr Braganza said.

El Niño declarations have also been made by the US Climate Prediction Centre and the Japan Meteorological Agency.

During El Niño, there is a higher chance of reduced rainfall for eastern Australia, higher daytime temperatures for the southern two-thirds of Australia, increased risk of extreme heat, and increased bushfire danger in south-eastern Australia.

Dry seasonal conditions need to be planned for and carefully managed for the sustainability of wool-growing enterprises, the industry and the environment.

Some areas of Australia already have drier than usual conditions.

While it remains to be seen whether these conditions eventuate more broadly across Australia this season, Australian Wool Innovation (AWI) has available for woolgrowers and sheep producers a range of planning and management resources, including:

Publications:

· Feeding and managing sheep in dry times

· Managing fodder prices for droughts

· Managing sheep in drought lots

· Which sheep do I keep?

· Drought feeding and management of sheep (Agriculture Victoria).

Decision support tools:

· Cost of production calculator

· LifetimeWool feed budget tables

· Feed On Offer library.

More information: These and other resources are available at www.wool.com/drought and www.wool.com/bushfires

Digital Editions


  • Holding on to their heritage

    Holding on to their heritage

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531373 TRADITIONAL family farms, passed down from generation to generation, are becoming rarer and rarer these days. With the…

More News

  • Fuel supply critical for farms

    Fuel supply critical for farms

    CITY dwellers are being urged to swap their cars for public transport and the government to make public transport free as the fuel crisis lingers. Victorian Farmers Federation president Brett…

  • Jujubes jewel

    Jujubes jewel

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 535568 THEY look like tiny apples, taste like a crisp pear and carry more vitamin C than an orange. And in the red dirt…

  • Independent actionable research

    Independent actionable research

    MAKING informed winter cropping decisions – based on detailed local research – is what is driving the 2026 Irrigation Farmers Network (IFN) Winter Variety Trials Research Results Discussion Day in…

  • Ricegrowers backs review

    Ricegrowers backs review

    The Ricegrowers’ Association has welcomed the start of a 12‑week consultation on the Murray–Darling Basin Plan Review. RGA president Peter Herrmann said industry would take the time to consider the…

  • Microbiome delivering maximum results

    Microbiome delivering maximum results

    STRONG roots and fibrous stems have proven hardy resistance to excessive heat, and saved a young nursery from devastating losses. Permaculturist Russell Calder did not lose a single plant through…