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Floodwater inundate cars on March 30 2022 in Lismore, Australia. Picture: Dan Peled/Getty Images
Floodwater inundate cars on March 30 2022 in Lismore, Australia. Picture: Dan Peled/Getty Images

Sydney — Heavy rains deluged Australia’s east coast on Wednesday, submerging entire towns, while thousands of people fled their homes for the second time within weeks after fast-moving flood waters burst river banks and broke over levees.

Several towns in northern New South Wales, already reeling after record floods over a month ago, were pounded by an intense low-pressure system overnight. Some regions took a month’s rainfall in under six hours, officials said.

“Unfortunately overnight, our worst fears have been realised with significant heavy rainfall across already saturated landscapes,” New South Wales emergency services minister Stephanie Cooke said during a media briefing.

Shops submerged

The main street in Byron Bay, a popular tourist destination about 750km north of Sydney, was inundated with several shops under water, television footage showed. One family was seen wading through knee-deep water, one woman with a child on the hip and other members carrying suitcases filled with belongings.

“Oh, it’s devastating,” Annick Nuylle, a Byron Bay store owner, said. “I’ve put [in] many years and a lot of love and hard work, so no matter if there is or there is no insurance, I think it’s my livelihood and it has been my life for 17 years, so it’s very sad.”

Dean Prosser, another Byron Bay resident, said he has never seen so much rain in the more than 50 years he has lived in the town. “We just had too much water fall out of the sky,” he told broadcaster ABC.

A total of 14 evacuation orders and eight warnings are in place along the northern New South Wales coast, which stretches across a distance of about 500km.

In the northern New South Wales city of Lismore, among the worst affected by record floods earlier in March, water levels in the city’s Wilsons River breached the levee height of 10.65m. Data showed that Lismore, home to nearly 30,000 people, received about 400mm of rain over a 24-hour period up to Wednesday morning.

There was no official warning that the levee had been breached after sirens malfunctioned, local media reported.

“Everything is falling apart in Lismore at the moment ... second time in a month,” mayor Steve Krieg told Nine Network. Social media footage showed stranded vehicles, including a caravan, floating on flooded streets.

Police said they were now searching for a woman believed to be missing in floodwaters near Lismore since Tuesday night after reports her vehicle became stuck. So far, two people have died in the recent weather event.

The weather bureau forecast “bands of very localised heavier rainfall” to drop within a few hours on Wednesday, potentially leading to life-threatening flash floods, with up to 200mm predicted to pummel many regions.

Australia’s east coast summer has been dominated by the La Nina climate pattern, typically associated with greater rainfall, for the second straight year, with rivers already at capacity after torrential rains. Sydney has already recorded 537mm in March — its wettest March on record. 

Reuters

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