"Scientists are warning this summer's sharp swings from record heat to torrential rain illustrate how climate change is becoming a dominant driving force in our weather.
Over the past few months, multiple parts of the country have lurched from extreme heat to flooding — sometimes in a matter of weeks — in a summer that has been described as one of "breakneck climate whiplash" by the Climate Council.
Making it more unusual, according to meteorologist and climate councillor Andrew Watkins, is that many of the extreme heat records have occurred despite the presence of a weak La Niña — which typically brings cooler, wetter conditions to large parts of Australia.
He said it points to a new reality where once reliable drivers of weather are now being overpowered by human influence.
"Climate change clearly is overtaking some of the other drivers at times," Dr Watkins, an adjunct professor at Monash University said.
"We are seeing records occur when we wouldn't really expect to see them."
Climate whiplash affected every state
In a new report by the Climate Council, which catalogues the summer's extreme events and their toll, examples of weather flipping from one extreme to another can be seen in nearly every state and territory.
One of the most stark examples of climate whiplash over recent months was in south-eastern Australia, where communities went from extreme heat and catastrophic fire warnings to flash flooding and back again in the space of just one month.
This timeline shows how that played out for Victoria's Otway Ranges in the state's south-west.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-03-17/summer-weather-whiplash-points-to-driving...And this "Climate whiplash" has resulted in new grain records in WA, and in the north and NSW. Lower in Victoria. Weather varies, who knew?