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Insurance claims surge after wild weather

The South Australian government is sending a team of engineers as it braces for flooding.

The South Australian government is sending a team of engineers as it braces for flooding. Photo: AAP

The wild weather that’s been battering the east coast of Australia has led to widespread flooding in multiple states and a subsequent surge in insurance claims.

NRMA Insurance says the number of weather-related damage claims during the spring season, which included NSW’s wettest November on record, was 35 per cent above average.

All up, 10,000 homes claimed weather damage from the insurer in Queensland, NSW and the ACT.

NRMA data shows nearly half the claims were for hail damage in the Coffs Harbour region on the NSW north coast in October, and wild weather was responsible for two-thirds of the claims.

The insurer’s natural perils executive manager Mark Leplastrier says it’s been “an ominous start to storm season”.

“Spring featured some of the most unpredictable and extreme weather we have seen in many years, and with a La Nina system now declared, we could be in for more wet weather over summer,” he said.

There has been some relief from flooding in NSW at least, with river heights dropping in several areas around the state after persistent wet weather.

The Hunter River has receded below minor flood levels, as have the Severn and Hawkesbury rivers.

Minor to moderate flooding is still occurring along the Gwydir, Macquarie, Macintyre, Bogan, Murrumbidgee, Warrego, Paroo and Snowy rivers.

There is still a risk of major flooding on the Namoi, Lachlan, Barwon, and Weir rivers.

The Namoi could send Wee Waa back into isolation with a major flood peak predicted on Tuesday night.

The river is expected to peak near 7.1 metres.

Mr Lepastrier said climate change impacts could make severe storms more frequent over a wider area, and seven out of 10 people in a recent survey said they worried natural disasters were increasing in frequency and severity.

Disaster assistance is available in local government areas around NSW.

The clean-up will come too late for many of the state’s farmers, who have had their hopes of a prosperous harvest crushed by weeks of heavy rain and flooding.

A survey of rural confidence by Rabobank released on Tuesday showed confidence was high leading into the harvest season, with 88 per cent of respondents predicting excellent conditions to continue, before flooding devastated crops.

“A few weeks ago, it was hard to imagine that cropping conditions in NSW could get any better, but we now have a situation where some growers, who had been preparing to harvest record-yielding crops, will actually harvest nothing,” Rabobank central NSW regional manager Toby Mendl said.

– AAP

Topics: Weather
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