‘That’s a bad combination’: why Australia may be in for a slushy snow season
Snow arrives in time for the start of ski season, but climate change and El Niño mean it may not stick around for long, experts say Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast There was optimism across Australian alpine resorts this week as their social media c
Snow arrives in time for the start of ski season, but climate change and El Niño mean it may not stick around for long, experts say
There was optimism across Australian alpine resorts this week as their social media channels filled with footage of snow flurries that arrived just in time for the opening of the ski season this weekend.
“We couldn’t be more excited,” said the Instagram account of Perisher , the southern hemisphere’s biggest ski resort in Kosciuszko national park in New South Wales, as hands swept the fresh snow from outdoor tables.
While the spectacular wintry scenes will bring enthusiasm, the outlook for the rest of the winter – and the coming decades – is not quite so positive.
With an El Niño looking likely to form in the coming weeks , the odds are stacked in favour of drier and warmer conditions though winter and spring.
“Overall with that dry and warm outlook and the El Niño, it does not favour good deep snow cover for skiers,” said Jonathan How, a senior forecaster at the Bureau of Meteorology.
“It tips the odds against a good season because of the less rainfall and high temperatures. That’s a bad combination.”
The Bureau of Meteorology’s long-range forecast for the winter months suggests below average snowfall for Australia’s alpine regions (with the possible exception of Mount Mawson in Tasmania) while both maximum and minimum temperatures are expected to be above average.

