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Australian region tropical cyclone

Type of cyclone in the Southern Hemisphere

Australian region tropical cyclone

Summary

Type of cyclone in the Southern Hemisphere

An Australian region tropical cyclone is a non-frontal, low-pressure system that has developed within an environment of warm sea surface temperatures and little vertical wind shear aloft in either the Southern Indian Ocean or the South Pacific Ocean. Within the Southern Hemisphere there are officially three areas where tropical cyclones develop on a regular basis: the South-West Indian Ocean between Africa and 90°E, the Australian region between 90°E and 160°E, and the South Pacific basin between 160°E and 120°W. The Australian region between 90°E and 160°E is officially monitored by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, the Indonesian Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysical Agency, and the Papua New Guinea National Weather Service, while others like the Fiji Meteorological Service and the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration also monitor the basin. Each tropical cyclone year within this basin starts on 1 July and runs throughout the year, encompassing the tropical cyclone season, which runs from 1 November and lasts until 30 April each season. Within the basin, most tropical cyclones have their origins within the South Pacific convergence zone or within the Northern Australian monsoon trough, both of which form an extensive area of cloudiness and are dominant features of the season. Within this region a tropical disturbance is classified as a tropical cyclone when it has 10-minute sustained wind speeds of at least 65 km/h (40 mph) that wrap halfway around the low level circulation centre, while a severe tropical cyclone is classified when the maximum 10-minute sustained wind speeds are greater than 120 km/h (75 mph).

Basin history

There is a history of tropical cyclones affecting northeastern Australia for over 5000 years; however, Clement Lindley Wragge was the first person to monitor and name them.

In the early history of tropical cyclones in the Australian region, the only evidence of a storm was based on ship reports and observations from land. Later, satellite imagery began in the basin in the 1959-60 season, although it was not continuous until 1970. In Western Australia in particular, the lack of population centers, shipping lanes, radars, and offshore stations meant that storms were tracked infrequently. After the onset of satellite imagery, the Dvorak technique was used to estimate storms' intensities and locations.

Each of three tropical cyclone warning centres (TCWCs) of the Bureau of Meteorology in Perth, Darwin and Brisbane used its own tropical cyclone naming list until the 2008–09 season, when the three TCWCs started to use the single Australian national naming list. From the 2020–21 season, the three TCWCs were unified into one single TCWC which still monitors all tropical cyclones that form within the Australian region, including any within the areas of responsibility of TCWC Jakarta or TCWC Port Moresby. Later in 2021, the Australian tropical cyclone warning centre was officially named as TCWC Melbourne.

Background

The Australian region is currently defined as being between 90°E and 160°E, and is monitored by five different warning centres during the season, which runs from 1 November to 30 April.

Australian tropical cyclone outlook regions

As of 2025, The Bureau of Meteorology has discontinued tropical cyclone seasonal outlooks, as season modelling is no longer accurate as a result of climate change.

The Bureau of Meteorology defines four regions within the Australian region which are used when the bureau issues tropical cyclone seasonal outlooks every year. These four regions are named the Western region, the Northwestern sub-region, the Northern region and the Eastern region. The Australian region overall averages eleven tropical cyclones in a season, and the bureau assesses the region as a whole to have a high level of accuracy when forecasting tropical cyclone activity.

The Western region encompasses the area east of 90°E and west of 125°E. The region covers the eastern Indian Ocean including the Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Christmas Island, and waters off Western Australia west of Kuri Bay. The region also covers waters off Indonesia that include the main islands of Java, Bali, Lombok, Sumbawa, Sumba, Flores and the western half of Timor. The region averages seven tropical cyclones in a season, and the bureau assesses the region to have a low level of accuracy when forecasting tropical cyclone activity.

The Northwestern sub-region encompasses the area east of 105°E, west of 130°E and north of 25°S. The sub-region covers waters off Western Australia north of Shark Bay, and extends westward to Christmas Island. The sub-region also covers waters off Indonesia as far west as Java and as far east as Timor. The sub-region averages five tropical cyclones in a season, and the bureau assesses the sub-region to have a moderate level of accuracy when forecasting tropical cyclone activity.

The Northern region encompasses the area east of 125°E and west of 142.5°E. The region covers the Timor Sea, the Banda Sea, the Arafura Sea and the Gulf of Carpentaria. The region averages three tropical cyclones in a season, and the bureau assesses the region to have a very low level of accuracy when forecasting tropical cyclone activity.

The Eastern region encompasses the area east of 142.5°E and west of 160°E. The region covers waters east of Torres Strait and includes the Coral Sea and the Tasman Sea. Lord Howe Island lies within the region, but Norfolk Island lies east of the region, although the bureau continues to monitor tropical cyclones when they are a threat to the external territory. The region also covers waters off Papua New Guinea and western parts of the Solomon Islands. The region averages four tropical cyclones in a season, and the bureau assesses the region to have a low level of accuracy when forecasting tropical cyclone activity.

Climatology

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Australian cyclone regions and their seasonal average.

The Australian region is subdivided into three smaller basins. The Eastern basin extends from 142.5-160°E, and averages three cyclones per season. The Central basin (Northern region) spans 125-142.5°E, averaging two cyclones each season, and the Western basin spans 90-125°E and records an average of six cyclones per season.

Seasons

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Before 1900

Main article: List of Australian region cyclones before 1900

1900–1909

1910–1919

1920–1929

1930–1939

1940–1949

1950–1959

1960–1969

SeasonTLTCSTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamageRetired namesNotes
1960–61
1961–62
1962–63
1963–64Audrey
1964–65Flora
1965–66
1966–67Dinah
1967–68
1968–6915131Amber
1969–7014141Ada14?Ada

1970s

SeasonTLTCSTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamageRetired namesNotes
1970–71202010Sheila-SophieUnknown?Dora
Fiona-Gertie
1971–72181810EmilyUnknown?Althea
Daisy
Emily
1972–7315158"Flores"1,574?MadgeDeadliest Australian Region cyclone season ever recorded.
Features the "Flores" cyclone. The deadliest cyclone recorded in the Southern Hemisphere
1973–7419199PamUnknown?Wanda
1974–7516167Trixie71?Tracy
Trixie
1975–7616158JoanUnknown?Joan
David
Beth
1976–7713136TedUnknown?Ted
1977–78952AlbyUnknown?Alby
1978–7913125HazelUnknown?
1979–8015159AmyUnknown?Simon

1980s

SeasonTLTCSTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamageRetired NamesNotes
1980–81141411MabelUnknownUnknownCliff
1981–8215157BernieUnknownUnknown
1982–83775ElinorUnknownUnknownJane
Elinor
1983–84222111Kathy1$19 millionKathy
Lance
1984–85201811Kristy0$3.5 millionNigel
Sandy
Margot
1985–8617168Victor153$250 millionWinifred
Manu
1986–87972Elsie0NoneConnie
Jason
Elsie
1987–88652Gwenda-Ezenina1$17.9 millionAgi
Charlie
Herbie
1988–8914136Orson6$93.9 millionIlona
Delilah
Ned
Aivu
Orson
1989–9014144AlexUnknownUnknownPedro
Felicity
Tina
Ivor

1990s

SeasonTLTCSTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamageRetired namesNotes
1990–9112107Marian27Joy
Daphne
Fifi
1991–9212109Graham5{{ntsp9400000$}}Mark
Ian
1992–93884Oliver0{{ntsp950000000$}}Nina
Lena
Oliver
Roger
Adel
1993–9414127Theodore22Naomi
Pearl
Quenton
Theodore
Sharon
1994–951966Chloe1Annette
Bobby
Violet
Warren
Chloe
Agnes
1995–9619159Olivia1{{ntsp58500000$}}Frank
Gertie
Barry
Celeste
Ethel
Kirsty
Olivia
1996–9717155Pancho34{{ntsp190000000$}}Lindsay
Fergus
Rachel
Justin
Rhonda
1997–981194TiffanySid
Katrinaaccess-date=19 February 2012author=Padgett, Garyyear=1997–2011url=http://www.australiasevereweather.com/cyclones/tropical_cyclone_summaries_track_data.htmarchive-date=30 December 2019url-status=livearchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191230082631/http://www.australiasevereweather.com/cyclones/tropical_cyclone_summaries_track_data.htmtitle=Monthly Global Tropical Cyclone Summaries}} Alt URL
1998–9921149Gwenda8{{ntsp250000000$}}Thelma
Rona
Vance
Elaine
Gwenda
1999-0014125Paul0{{ntsp250500000$}}John
Steve
Tessi
Rosita
************Gwenda****'''≥{{ntsp1708900000$}}'''

2000s

SeasonTLTCSTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamageRetired namesNotes
2000–011483Sam2{{ntsp12800000$}}Sam
Abigail
2001–0214103Chris19{{ntsp929000$}}Upia
2002–031193Inigo62{{ntsp28000000$}}Erica
Graham
Inigo
Epi
2003–0413105Fay0{{ntsp20000000$}}Monty
Fay
2004–0513105Ingrid5{{ntsp14400000$}}Harvey
Ingrid
2005–0618128Glenda0{{ntsp5100000$}}Clare
Larry
Glenda
Monica
2006–07853George3George
2007–0814103Pancho149{{ntsp86000000$}}Guba
Helen
Durga
2008–0924103Hamish5{{ntsp103300000$}}Dominic
Hamish
2009–101384Laurence3{{ntsp681000000$}}Laurence
Magda
************Inigo****'''≥{{ntsp1754129000$}}'''

2010s

SeasonTLTCSTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamageRetired namesNotes
2010–1128116Yasi3{{ntsp3556200000$}}Tasha
Carlos
2011–122173Lua16{{ntsp230000000$}}Heidi
Jasmine
Lua
2012–131696Narelle20{{ntsp2500074000$}}Oswald
Rusty
2013–1417105Ita22{{ntsp957700000$}}Christine
Ita
2014–151897Marcia1{{ntsp732000000$}}Lam
Marcia
Olwyn
Quang
2015–161130Stan0NoneNone
2016–173093Ernie16{{ntsp1800000000$}}Debbie
2017–1823113Marcus41{{ntsp165000000$}}Marcus
2018–1925115Veronica14{{ntsp1631040000$}}Trevor
Veronica
2019–201993Ferdinand28$4.3 millionDamien
Harold
Mangga
************Marcus****'''≥{{ntsp12595000000$}}'''

2020s

SeasonTLTCSTCStrongest
stormDeathsDamageRetired namesNotesTotals1194424Darian and Ilsa285$3.709 billion10 names
2020–212783Niran272$701 millionSerojaSecond-deadliest Australian region cyclone season on record.
2021–2232102Vernon4$80 millionSeth
2022–232575Darian
Ilsa8$225 millionFreddy
Gabrielle
Ilsa
2023–241186Jasper1$790 millionJasper
Kirrily
Megan
2024–2524128Zelia52$1.913 billionZelia
AlfredFirst above-average season in the Australian region since 2005–06.
2025–26974{{color box{{storm colorA4

Notes

References

References

  1. RA V Tropical Cyclone Committee. (5 May 2015). "List of Tropical Cyclone Names withdrawn from use due to a Cyclone's Negative Impact on one or more countries". World Meteorological Organization.
  2. (May 2004). "Palaeotempestology: the study of prehistoric tropical cyclones—a review and implications for hazard assessment". Environment International.
  3. (1999). "Offshore Technology Conference".
  4. (2020). "Regional Association V -Tropical Cyclone Operational Plan for the South Pacific and South-East Indian Ocean". World Meteorological Organization.
  5. "Tropical cyclone climatology".
  6. "Tropical cyclone knowledge centre {{!}} The Bureau of Meteorology".
  7. (2025-10-15). "Weather bureau 'retires' cyclone outlook ahead of WA wet season". ABC News.
  8. (12 October 2020). "Australian Tropical Cyclone Outlook for 2020 to 2021". Bureau of Meteorology.
  9. (20 December 2012). "Upgrades to the Norfolk Island Tropical Cyclone Warning Service". Bureau of Meteorology.
  10. "Australian tropical cyclone season monitoring".
  11. CSIRO. "Tropical cyclones".
  12. Ramsay, H. A.. (2017-07-01). "The Modulating Influence of Indian Ocean Sea Surface Temperatures on Australian Region Seasonal Tropical Cyclone Counts". Journal of Climate.
  13. [https://nespclimate.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/A4_4pp_brochure_NESP_ESCC_Tropical_Cyclones_FINAL_Nov11_2019_WEB.pdf Tropical cyclones and climate change in Australia] – Earth Systems and Climate Change Hub
  14. "Archived copy".
  15. Padgett, Gary. (29 July 2012). "Monthly Global Tropical Cyclone Summaries}} [http://www.typhoon2000.ph/archives.htm#gp Alt URL] {{Webarchive".
  16. National Climate Centre. (3 July 2012). "Record-breaking La Niña events – Tropical cyclone activity during 2010–11 and 2011–12". Australian Bureau of Meteorology.
  17. Nathan Paull and Miranda Forster. (29 January 2013). "Floods recede as states count cost". News Limited.
  18. Queensland Regional Office. (September 2015). "Tropical Cyclone Raquel". Australian Bureau of Meteorology.
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