From the BBC:
“Australia
floods: Thousands to be evacuated as downpours worsen”
(Towns on the
New South Wales coast like Port Macquarie have been badly affected)
Thousands of
Australians are set to be evacuated from their homes as severe flooding in the
Sydney area worsens. Days of torrential downpours across large areas of New
South Wales state have caused rivers and dams to overflow, damaging homes. The
state's premier said the weather system that has caused the worst floods in decades
was not going away and people should take it seriously. Prime Minister Scott
Morrison has offered funds for those forced to flee. Forecasters predict that
the Hawkesbury river, north-west of Sydney, will reach its highest level since
a devastating flood in 1961 on Monday. And the Warragamba Dam, Sydney's main
water source, has been overflowing for the first time in years. On Sunday a
young couple in New South Wales saw their house swept away by flash floods on
what should have been their wedding day. Shocked neighbours filmed the uprooted
three-bedroom cottage bobbing along the Manning river after it burst its banks
following heavy rain. Seven emergency shelters have opened across the state.
Waters are not expected to subside until Thursday.
How serious is the situation?
About 1,000 people in western Sydney have been forced to
leave their homes. Several thousand more in the Hawkesbury-Nepean valley
could be evacuated in the coming days, New South Wales Premier Gladys
Berejiklian said. Roads and bridges have been cut off and more than 100
schools have been closed. Flights have been suspended at Newcastle
airport, which is 117km (72 miles) north of Sydney. "What we're
going through now is different to what you've been through for the last 50
years, so please take it seriously," Ms Berejiklian said, according to the
Sydney Morning Herald. "It's the sustained rainfall, the fact that
weather event has settled in, it's not moving on, and also, of course, the
capacity of the [Warragamba Dam] spillover and what that might mean," she
added. Jamisontown resident Ellen Brabin told ABC News that she had not
seen floods as severe as this in more than 40 years. "I've seen all
the floods and stuff, and never had to move before so this is different,"
she said. "The street will always go up, but this time around I've
noticed that usually when the rain eases up it disappears, this time it's not
disappearing like it used to," she said. "There's definitely
something different about it." There have also been warnings from
meteorologists that two weather systems could collide on Monday night or
Tuesday morning, creating a "last blast" of rain and storms that
could last until Wednesday.
^ Australia has
had a rough 2019, 2020 and 2021. From wildfires to Covid to flooding. They
really deserve to catch a break and have only nice things for a while. ^
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