NewsNational News

Actions

Severe cyclone Debbie aiming for Australia

Posted
and last updated

Thousands of residents in Queensland, in northeastern Australia, have been ordered to leave their homes as severe Tropical Cyclone Debbie approaches, bringing with it powerful winds and heavy rain. 

 

The storm continued to intensify as it approached landfall, becoming a Category 3 cyclone, according to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center. It's expected to make landfall near the town of Ayr on Tuesday morning local time (late Monday ET). 

Cyclone Debbie is forecast to pack gusts of up to 150 mph (240 kph), as well as flash flooding and storm surges as high as four meters.

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said that 3,500 residents had already been evacuated. 

An additional 2,000 people have been ordered to evacuate in the Bowen area, as the cyclone has tracked farther south than originally predicted, she added. 

Officials predict cyclone will be 'nasty'

Some residents are refusing to leave their home, Palaszczuk said, with police going door to door in a final attempt to get people to safety.

"This is going to be a nasty cyclone," Palaszczuk told reporters on Monday morning. 

"There is no time for complacency ... the window of opportunity to leave is drastically closing," she said. "I am just pleading to everyone, please, listen to authorities. This is about your safety, it is about the safety of your family and the safety of your children."

Cyclone Debbie is the largest storm to hit Queensland since the Category 5 cyclone Yasi in 2011, which ripped homes from their foundations and destroyed farmland. Debbie could end up being as severe as Yasi, Palaszczuk warned. 

Storm surge

John D Ginger, research director at the Cyclone Testing Station at James Cook University, said that coastal buildings were most at risk. 

"Houses in low-lying coastal regions ... and [which] are subjected to storm surge will be vulnerable to significant damage," he said. 

The timing of cyclone Debbie's expected landfall coincides with a 12-foot tide in Bowen, one of the highest tides of the year, according to CNN affiliate 7 News. 

"If you are in a storm surge zone and you are directed to leave -- you must leave. You cannot shelter from a storm surge," Queensland police tweeted Monday. 

The severe weather has already claimed the life of a 31-year-old woman after dangerous conditions were linked to a fatal car crash Sunday night near the town of Proserpine, Queensland police commissioner Ian Stewart said.

Over 1,000 emergency service workers have been sent to the region in preparation, and all schools remain closed until further notice, 7 News reported.