Sydney residents assess flood damage as wild weather eases

Sydney residents assess flood damage as wild weather eases


Residents next to the overflowing Hawkesbury River in the northwestern Sydney suburb of Windsor on July 6, 2022. Heavy rain that pummeled Sydney over the last five days eased on Thursday as flood-weary residents looked to return to homes to take stock of the damage, some for the third time this year.

Muhammad Farooq | Afp | Getty Images

Heavy rain that pummeled Sydney over the last five days eased on Thursday as flood-weary residents looked to return to homes to take stock of the damage, some for the third time this year.

An intense low-pressure system formed off Australia’s east coast over the weekend has weakened, satellite images showed, but major flooding could continue for several days with rivers and dams already at full capacity even before the latest storm.

Water levels in Hawkesbury River in Sydney’s west began to recede bringing relief to residents in Windsor, one of the worst-hit suburbs. But heavy rain triggered flash floods in the mid-north coast of New South Wales forcing nighttime evacuations.

“We’re in a mixed response at the moment of returning communities to their homes, but still responding to the evolving threat up in the mid-north coast… and central coast (of New South Wales),” state emergency services Deputy Commissioner Ashley Sullivan told ABC television. “So we’ve got a number of flood rescues ongoing at the moment.”

About 60,000 residents in New South Wales have been told to either evacuate or that they might receive evacuation orders, down from Wednesday’s 85,000. More than 30,000 have been allowed to go back into homes to assess damage, authorities said.

Several regions have seen rainfall records for July broken because of the relentless downpour, with some places getting more than the annual average since Saturday. 

The frequent floods have raised questions about how prepared Australia is for severe weather events.

Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers has directed the treasury to model the impact of climate change on the Australian economy, re-starting work abandoned for almost a decade by the previous conservative governments, the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper reported.

Australia’s east coast weather has been dominated by the La Nina climate pattern, typically associated with greater rainfall, for the second consecutive year. Though it ended in June, weather officials said there is a 50-50 chance it may return this year.



Source

Expect tariff ‘cascade’ effect across slowing global economy, top UN official warns
World

Expect tariff ‘cascade’ effect across slowing global economy, top UN official warns

The leading arm of the United Nations’ organization focused on trade and development, UNCTAD, said President Trump’s tariff policies are already creating new costs and disruptions in the global supply chain, and for less developed nations that trade with the U.S., the worst economic fallout hasn’t hit yet. “We already see a disruption in the […]

Read More
Ether is starting to outperform bitcoin – and further gains could be ahead for the crypto, charts show
World

Ether is starting to outperform bitcoin – and further gains could be ahead for the crypto, charts show

Ether continues to demonstrate notable strength, both on an absolute basis and relative to bitcoin , which suggests that its recent up-move could kickstart further gains. First, on this daily chart, it’s clear that ETH finally has broken out of a bullish inverse head-and-shoulders pattern, a technical formation that has been under construction for most […]

Read More
Scale AI cuts 14% of workforce after Meta investment, hiring of founder Wang
World

Scale AI cuts 14% of workforce after Meta investment, hiring of founder Wang

Facade with logo at headquarters of Scale AI, San Francisco, California, June 2, 2025. Smith Collection | Gado | Archive Photos | Getty Images Weeks after Meta poured $14.3 billion into Scale AI and hired founder Alexandr Wang, the artificial intelligence startup is cutting 200 full-time employees, or 14% of its staff. Scale AI’s interim […]

Read More