Island Climate Update 94 - July 2008

July

Monthly climate

Tropical Pacific rainfall

Three-month outlook

Feature article

Data sources

In this issue

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    Feature article

    Southwest Pacific Tropical Cyclone frequencies, 1977 – 2008.
    Damage to a banana plantation in Vanuatu from tropical cyclone Funa. (Photo: David Gibson, Vanuatu Meteorological Service)
    Tropical Cyclones in the Southwest Pacific Basin 2007-08
    Jim Salinger, Jim Renwick, and Andrew Lorrey, NIWA
    Southwest Pacific tropical cyclones in 2007–08
    The 2007–08 Southwest Pacific tropical cyclone (TC) season had five occurrences east of 150°E, two less than the seasonal average (1976–77 to 2006–07).
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    July

    An overview of the present climate in the tropical South Pacific Islands, with an outlook for the coming months, to assist in dissemination of climate information in the Pacific region.
    Number 94 – July 2008
    June’s climate
    The South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ) extended from Papua New Guinea, over northern Vanuatu, across Niue to the Austral Islands, and was displaced southwest of normal.
    Very suppressed convection from Western Kiribati to Eastern Kiribati and about the Equator weakened.
    Below normal rainfall for the northern part of French Polynesia, New Caledonia, and in part
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    Monthly climate

    Climate developments in June 2008
    Outgoing Long-wave Radiation anomalies for June 2008. (Click for enlargement and detail)
    The South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ) extended southeast from Papua New Guinea to Fiji and Niue and across to the Southern Cook Islands and Austral Islands, with an overall displaced position southwest of normal. A region of suppressed convection that was persistent along the Equator during the austral spring and summer has contracted, but still extends from Western Kiribati to Eastern Kiribati including Tuvalu, Tokelau, and the Northern Cook Islands.
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    Three-month outlook

    Tropical rainfall outlook: July to September 2008
    Rainfall outlook map for July to September 2008. (Click for enlargement)
    La Niña conditions have dissipated, but residual effects are still likely to have an influence on rainfall patterns during the July–September 2008 forecast period. A large region of suppressed convection is very likely in the southwest Pacific encompassing the Northern Cook Islands, Tuamotu, the Society Islands, the Austral Islands, and the Marquesas.
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    Tropical Pacific rainfall

    Tropical Pacific rainfall - June 2008
    Territory and station name
    June 2008 rainfall
    total (mm)
    June 2008 percent
    of average
    Australia
    Cairns Airport
    19
    39
    Townsville Airport
    1
    4
    Brisbane Airport
    122
    172
    Sydney Airport
    127
    101
    Cook Islands
    Penrhyn
    22
    15
    Aitutaki
    64
    68
    Rarotonga Airport
    35
    31
    Fiji
    Rotuma Island
    374
    163
    Udu Point
    341
    294
    Nadi Airport
    50
    77
    Nausori
    362
    240
    French Polynesia
    Hiva Hoa, Atuona
    101
    58
    Bora Bora
    70
    76
    Tahiti – Faa’a
    123
    193
    Tuamotu, Takaroa
    82
    91
    Gambier, Rikitea
    136
    84
    Tubuai
    92
    79
    Rapa
    161
    80
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    Data sources

    Sources of South Pacific rainfall data
    This bulletin is a multi-national project with important collaboration from the following Pacific nations:
    American Samoa
    Australia
    Cook Islands
    Fiji
    French Polynesia
    Kiribati
    New Caledonia
    New Zealand
    Niue
    Papua New Guinea
    Pitcairn Island
    Samoa
    Solomon Islands
    Tokelau
    Tonga
    Tuvalu
    Vanuatu
    Requests for Pacific island climate data should be directed to the Meteorological Services concerned.
    Acknowledgements
    This bulletin is produced by NIWA and made possible with financial support from the New Zealand Agency for International Development (NZAID), with addi