Severe Flash Flooding Alerts Issued for Southeast Australia
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Melbourne, March 2 (NationPress) Urgent alerts regarding life-threatening flash flooding have been announced for extensive regions within the southeastern Australian states of Victoria and New South Wales (NSW).
The Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) issued severe weather advisories on Monday, warning of heavy and localized intense rainfall impacting areas in central and northern Victoria as well as southern and southwestern NSW.
It indicated that rainfall accumulation could reach up to 100 mm over a six-hour period on Monday across the affected regions, which stretch over 650 km from the central Victorian town of Seymour to the mining town of Broken Hill in far western NSW.
“Localized intense rainfall has the potential to cause hazardous and life-threatening flash flooding, particularly with thunderstorms expected this morning,” the alert stated.
The State Emergency Service branches in both Victoria and NSW have urged residents to refrain from driving through floodwaters and to steer clear of waterways.
Flood watch updates released by the BoM for both states on Sunday indicated that over 20 catchments could be impacted by this significant rainfall event, according to a report from Xinhua news agency.
On February 27, South Australia also received an emergency warning for perilous flash flooding due to heavy rainfall.
In a severe weather alert issued on Friday morning, the BoM predicted that heavy to intense rainfall would affect South Australia’s arid northern and northeastern areas before moving south towards the state capital, Adelaide, throughout the weekend.
The BoM station in the northwest pastoral district town of Coober Pedy had not recorded more than 5 mm of rain in a single day since October 2025 and experienced no rainfall during January or December.