South African weather service predicts wet southeast and dry southwest

The South African Weather Service forecasts above-normal rainfall for the southeastern and eastern coastal areas during autumn and early winter, while the southwestern regions face below-normal precipitation.

As autumn approaches, the South African Weather Service has issued its Seasonal Climate Watch report, projecting conditions through the end of July. In the southern and eastern coastal regions, significant rainfall is expected to exceed normal levels. This development should boost dam levels and groundwater recharge, easing water shortages in areas like the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal.

Conversely, the southwestern parts of the country, including Cape Town, anticipate below-normal rainfall. Combined with above-normal minimum and maximum temperatures across most of South Africa, this could heighten water stress and evaporation rates, straining already scarce resources. Such conditions may adversely affect the winter wheat harvest, a sector already under pressure.

The report also highlights shifts in broader climate patterns. The El Niño-Southern Oscillation remains in a weak La Niña phase but is projected to transition to neutral and possibly develop into El Niño by the end of winter. This could influence summer rainfall next season. The previous El Niño event in 2023/24 triggered widespread droughts across southern Africa, damaging crops like maize. Recent La Niña rains have provided some relief, supporting a maize production estimate of 16.13 million tonnes for 2025-26, a 3% decline from the prior year but still above the long-term average.

Overall, temperatures are set to run higher than usual nationwide during this period.

Makala yanayohusiana

The South African Weather Service has updated its forecast to predict below-normal rainfall in the southwestern and southern coastal parts during winter until August. This drier outlook raises concerns for the winter wheat crop amid rising fuel and fertiliser prices linked to the Iran conflict. Eastern coastal areas may see above-normal rain, heightening flood risks.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Following earlier forecasts of dry southwestern winters, the South African Weather Service's latest outlook through September 2026 warns of a potential super El Niño by May, threatening summer droughts, while Western Cape dams sit at critically low 46% capacity.

The Kenya Meteorological Service Authority (KMSA) has issued an advisory warning of intensified rainfall from April 22 to 27 across coastal, northeastern and southeastern lowland regions.

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Kenya's weather department has announced that ongoing heavy rains are expected to reduce significantly by mid-May 2026. This signals the end of the March-April-May rainy season. However, regions like Mount Kenya and Lake Victoria Basin will see rains continue into June.

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Kenya Meteorological Service issues El Niño alert for 2026

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WMO warns of strong El Niño in second half of year

Jumatatu, 1. Mwezi wa sita 2026, 09:52:17

Eastern Cape citrus farmers concerned about expected heavy rains

Jumatatu, 18. Mwezi wa tano 2026, 18:37:12

Nairobi among regions to experience continued rainfall until May 25, says Kenya Met

Jumatatu, 4. Mwezi wa tano 2026, 12:52:32

Disaster management teams on high alert in KwaZulu-Natal districts

Jumamosi, 2. Mwezi wa tano 2026, 08:46:28

Western Cape expected to see improved weather after cold front

Jumamosi, 25. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 02:20:14

SAWS warns of cold, wet and windy weather in Western Cape

Ijumaa, 24. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 22:28:35

Yellow level 2 warning issued for Gauteng thunderstorms

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Kenya Met forecasts rains in five regions this weekend

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Kenya Met warns farmers of sparse early April rains

 

 

 

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