What’s behind the deadly, record-breaking floods in north Queensland? | Steve Turton for the Conversation


Record-breaking floods across north Queensland have turned deadly, with one woman drowning while being rescued on Sunday. And the flood waters were still rising, with rain set to continue.

With reports of up to one metre of rainfall in parts of north-east Queensland, the heaviest rain has fallen between Lucinda to Townsville in northern Queensland as the Bureau of Meteorology warns the big wet will continue for days.

Ingham and nearby towns, about 100km from Townsville, are some of the worst hit areas, with residents experiencing flooding from the Herbert River.

The continued deluge has led to swollen waterways with major flood warnings in place for the Herbert River, the Ross and Bohle River, the Horton River and the Upper Burdekin River.

With more heavy rain forecast for the next 24 hours, the Herbert is likely to break the 1967 record of 15.2 metres.

Queensland’s premier, David Crisafulli – who grew up on his family’s sugar cane farm in Ingham – has said the floods will be a “once-in-a-century” event for the town. Authorities say the town has lost power and an extended outage is likely.

The atmospheric factors behind these floods are similar to previous floods in the region – and climate change is no doubt playing a role.

Where are the floods hitting?

For many people in Townsville – the largest city in northern Australia – the unfolding emergency will bring back memories of the devastating February 2019 floods, which caused $1.24bn in damage. Residents have been asked to evacuate from several low-lying suburbs which were inundated in 2019.

It is too early to say if this flood will be worse. Fortunately, water levels in the city’s Ross River Dam are much lower than 2019. Townsville airport recorded 545mm of rain over the 48 hours to Sunday morning, with many north-west suburbs recording much higher levels. The township of Rollingstone – 60km north-west of Townsville – recorded a whopping 702mm over the 24 hours to 9am Sunday.

Further north in the Cairns to Daintree region, residents are watching with concern, with many still raw after the record-breaking floods of December 2023.

What’s behind these floods?

The 2025 extreme rainfall event, the 2019 Townsville floods and the 2023 Cairns and Daintree floods are remarkably similar in many ways.

What triggered each of these floods was prolonged heavy rain falling on the south-east flank of a stationary tropical low weather system. Normally, tropical lows bring wind and rain but move through quite quickly. But now some of these systems are stalling, sitting in place over or near land and dumping huge volumes of rain.

Last week the Bureau of Meteorology warned that five tropical lows were forming around northern Australia. Most tropical cyclones form from tropical lows embedded in the region’s monsoon trough, a large low pressure band which forms over summer and draws in warm, moist air from the adjacent tropical seas.

But significant rain events like this one don’t necessarily require a tropical cyclone. Slow-moving deep monsoon lows over land can also deliver huge amounts of rain and widespread flooding.

These atmospheric conditions allow intense rain bands to form between converging winds: warm, moist winds from the north-east and south-east winds originating from the Coral Sea. As the winds collide, they push the moist air up into the cooler parts of the atmosphere where it condenses and falls as torrential rain.

More extreme rainfall and higher frequencies of flooded rivers and flash floods around the world have a clear link to climate change and global heating.

The main drivers behind these events include warming of the atmosphere. For every 1C of warming, the atmosphere holds 7% more water vapour. Research suggests this figure could be even higher for short-duration rainfall.

Hotter oceans hold more energy, meaning they can also amplify the global water cycle.

This year’s late monsoon

This year sea surface temperatures in the north-west Coral Sea are 1C to 2C above average. Ocean temperatures have risen because of a lack of cloud cover and rain last month. In north-western Australia, this has given rise to an intensifying marine heatwave.

This ocean heat is likely to be driven by the Australian monsoon’s latest recorded arrival. The monsoon brings heavy rains to northern Australia, triggering the wet season. When it arrives, sea surface temperatures generally drop due to a combination of high cloud cover and the cooling effect of rainwater.

After a slow start, the north Australian monsoon season is now in full swing.

The Bureau of Meteorology is monitoring an active monsoon trough for any low-pressure systems, which may develop into tropical cyclones over the next week or so. If a cyclone does form, it will gain energy from warmer than usual sea surface temperatures.

What’s next for north Queensland?

The flood emergency in north Queensland is far from over. All global circulation models predict that heavy rain will continue in the region, extending up towards Cape York and the gulf country as a monsoon surge moves in from Indonesia.

As river catchments get saturated, more and more water will run off and engorge rivers. Forecasts are for rain to continue for the next few days. We are likely to see more flooding in more places this week.

For the latest updates, check the Bureau of Meteorology’s Queensland flood warnings, ABC Emergency or local ABC radio stations.



Source link

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles