Source: Bureau of Meteorology
Issued at 7:58 am EST on Thursday 6 March 2025
Headline:
Impacts from Tropical Cyclone Alfred increasing for southeast
Queensland and northeast New South Wales.
Areas Affected:
Warning Zone
Double Island Point in Queensland to Grafton in New South Wales,
including Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, Byron Bay and
Ballina but not including Grafton.
Watch Zone
None.
Cancelled Zone
None.
Details of Tropical Cyclone Alfred 22U at 7:00 am AEST [8:00 am
AEDT]:
Intensity: Category 2, sustained winds near the centre of 95
kilometres per hour with wind gusts to 130 kilometres per
hour.
Location: within 20 kilometres of 27.5 degrees South 155.9 degrees
East, estimated to be 285 kilometres east of Brisbane and 260
kilometres east northeast of Gold Coast.
Movement: west southwest at 7 kilometres per hour.
Tropical Cyclone Alfred will continue its approach towards the
southeast Queensland coast, with the far western edge already
impacting the coast between Coolangatta and Ballina.
Alfred is a category 2 cyclone, and is forecast to maintain this
intensity as it continues to approach the southeast Queensland
coast. The centre of Alfred is expected to cross the coast later
Friday or early Saturday, most likely between Maroochydore and
Coolangatta.
Hazards:
Gales with DAMAGING WIND GUSTS to 120 kilometres per hour are
developing near the coast between Coolangatta and Ballina. Gales
with DAMAGING WIND GUSTS to 120 kilometres per hour are expected to
develop along the remaining southeast Queensland and northeastern
New South Wales coastal and island communities between Double
Island Point and Grafton during Thursday and will persist through
Friday.
DESTRUCTIVE WIND GUSTS of up to 155 kilometres per hour may
develop about coastal and island locations near, and to the south
of, the cyclone centre, possibly as far south as Cape Byron, from
early Friday as Alfred's destructive core approaches and crosses
the coast. DESTRUCTIVE WIND GUSTS may extend further inland close
to the cyclone centre during Friday.
A DANGEROUS STORM TIDE is likely along the coastal foreshore for
exposed areas between Cape Moreton and Ballina, including the Gold
Coast and Byron Bay beaches, ahead of the coastal crossing time on
the high tides. Tides are likely to rise significantly above the
highest high tide mark with damaging waves and dangerous inundation
of coastal low-lying areas.
ABNORMALLY HIGH TIDES are likely to continue causing MINOR
FLOODING of coastal low lying areas between Double Island Point and
Grafton, particularly during the time of high tides early Friday
morning (tonight) and early Saturday morning (Friday night).
DAMAGING SURF leading to significant beach erosion remains likely
for the open beaches between Double Island Point and Grafton, and
further south over the New South Wales coast. Separate Coastal
Hazard and Hazardous Surf Warning are current for southeast
Queensland and northeastern New South Wales coasts.
HEAVY RAINFALL may develop for southeast Queensland and
northeastern New South Wales from Thursday night. HEAVY to locally
INTENSE RAINFALL which may lead to DANGEROUS AND LIFE-THREATENING
FLASH FLOODING may occur near and south of the cyclone centre as
Alfred approaches and crosses the coast. Separate Severe Weather
Warning and Flood Watches are current for southeast Queensland and
northeast New South Wales.
Refer to associated warnings for Queensland and New South Wales at
http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/warnings.
Recommended Action:
People between Double Island Point in Queensland and Grafton in
New South Wales should immediately commence or continue
preparations, especially securing boats and property.
- For cyclone preparedness and safety advice, visit the Get Ready
Queensland website (www.getready.qld.gov.au)
- If you choose to take shelter away from your home, stay COVID-19
safe and pack a mask and hand sanitiser (if you have them).
- For emergency assistance call the Queensland State Emergency
Service or New South Wales State Emergency Service (SES) on 132 500
(for assistance with storm damage, rising flood water, fallen trees
on buildings or roof damage).
Current
Tropical Cyclones
05/Mar/2025 10:06 PM