Advertisement

Queensland braces for days of life-threatening flash floods after Cyclone Jasper

Cyclone Jasper has dumped as much as a metre of rain on parts of Queensland in four days.

Cyclone Jasper has dumped as much as a metre of rain on parts of Queensland in four days. Photo: AAP

Wild weather and life-threatening flooding in far north Queensland is not expected to ease for days as a 10-year-old girl fights for life after being struck by lightning in the state’s south-east.

Ex-tropical Cyclone Jasper is lashing the north of the state, with areas between Daintree and Ingham receiving more than 500mm of rain.

The Bureau of Meteorology said more than 20 rain gauges in the region had recorded more than a metre of rainfall, with water levels expected to break 1977 records.

Premier Steven Miles called the situation very serious, with the potential to get worse.

“There is a serious weather emergency playing out right now,” he said.

“There’s been a very high level of rainfall overnight and during today, and it’s likely to continue.”

Bureau meteorologist Laura Boekel said rivers and creeks were responding rapidly to further rainfall and urged people in the area to stay up to date with evolving warnings.

“These are really high amounts of rainfall and they’re falling into catchments that are already saturated,” she said.

There was a “very high likelihood” conditions would not ease until Tuesday afternoon.

There have been multiple evacuations and rescues, mostly at Mossman, Douglas, Gordonvale and Innisfail.

No people have been reported missing in flood waters.

Several low-lying homes have been impacted by flood water, Deputy Police Commissioner and State Disaster Co-ordinator Shane Chelepy said.

Some residents climbed onto roofs to escape flood waters and were forced to wait for rescue.

“It was too dangerous for us to rescue them at that point in time,” Chelepy said.

Cairns airport shut down on Sunday afternoon after receiving 309mm of rainfall in 24 hours, with flood waters predicted to exceed 3.8 metres.

More than 10,500 people were without power on Sunday evening with parts of the state also experiencing a heatwave.

Severe thunderstorms also lashed the state’s south-east across the weekend.

A 10-year-old girl was struck by lightning at a private property in Beerwah on the Sunshine Coast at 2.30pm on Saturday during a storm and was in a critical condition in hospital as of Sunday evening.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his government was working closely with the Queensland government to ensure assistance was available to those who needed it.

The Bruce Highway was closed at 13 places between Cairns and Ingham on Sunday afternoon.

Homes, buildings, roads and bridges have been inundated while authorities also warned of landslides and the risk vital services such as power, water, sewerage and telephone services could be cut.

Residents and businesses in the Cairns have been advised to use water for emergency purposes only as council’s treatment plants were offline due to flooding.

Black Mountain in the Barron catchment received the highest total amount of rainfall in the period from 9am on Sunday with 652mm.

Major flood warnings have been issued for the Daintree, Mossman and Herbert rivers, Johnstone River Catchment and the Mulgrave, Russell and Tully rivers.

Jasper has reached the waters of the Gulf of Carpentaria as a low after dumping heavy rain on parts of the state for four days.

The system is slowly moving west and could redevelop into a cyclone from Wednesday as it moves north, Angus Hines from the Bureau of Meteorology said.

-AAP

Stay informed, daily
A FREE subscription to The New Daily arrives every morning and evening.
The New Daily is a trusted source of national news and information and is provided free for all Australians. Read our editorial charter
Copyright © 2024 The New Daily.
All rights reserved.