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Flooding cuts road and rail links between SA and WA

The Eyre Highway connecting South Australia to Western Australia has again been closed due to flooding, with the rail line across the Nullabor also cut and the Indian Pacific and freight train services brought to a halt.

 

Mar 13, 2024, updated Mar 13, 2024
The Indian Pacific rail line in Western Australia has been closed by flooding, along with the Eyre Highway. File photo: Selina Day / AAP

The Indian Pacific rail line in Western Australia has been closed by flooding, along with the Eyre Highway. File photo: Selina Day / AAP

Nearly a year’s worth of rain has fallen on parts of WA in the past few days, cutting road and rail routes across the Nullabor to SA.

The Eyre Highway had just reopened after being closed due to flooding, but it was closed again in both directions on Tuesday night.

The Trans-Australian Railway line which carries key freight and the Indian Pacific passenger train to Adelaide and Sydney also is shut, with floodwaters inundating parts of the track.

The east-west rail line is expected to remain closed until later in the week, the Australian Rail Track Corporation said.

“Due to a severe weather incident on the Nullarbor, the Indian Pacific schedule until Saturday 16 March has been impacted,” its website says.

“At this time, all departures from Sunday 17 March will operate as scheduled.

More than 200mm of rain fell on parts of south-east WA in the 24 hours to 9am on Tuesday, with March rainfall records tumbling for the Eucla and Goldfields districts.

Average rainfall in those areas is about 260mm per year.

The Bureau of Meteorology has forecast further 24-hour totals of up to 150mm for affected areas from Tuesday toWednesday.

The WA Department of Fire and Emergency Services advised those living in the Goldfields-Midlands and Midwest-Gascoyne regions to take action with severe weather on its way.

The agency also warned of flooding in the Eucla and Rawlinna areas as well as Laverton, Balladonia, Cundeelee, Ilkurlka, Warburton, Yelma and Lake Carnegie in a series of updates late on Tuesday afternoon.

More than 200mm of rain fell on parts of south-east WA in the 24 hours to 9am on Tuesday, with March rainfall records tumbling for the Eucla and Goldfields districts.

Average rainfall in those areas is about 260mm per year.

The Bureau of Meteorology has forecast further 24-hour totals of up to 150mm for affected areas during Tuesday and Wednesday.

“A near-stationary trough over southeastern Western Australia will remain in the area until the middle of the week,” the bureau said on Tuesday.

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“A moist air mass drawn southward from the tropics is combining with this trough to produce a band of heavy rainfall, with embedded thunderstorms capable of locally intense falls.”

The system is expected to persist throughout the rest of Tuesday and into Wednesday.

Intense rainfall of up to 80mm was forecast across six hours, potentially leading to dangerous and life-threatening flash flooding.

WA’s Department of Fire and Emergency Services warned residents in Rawlinna, Carnegie, Cocklebiddy, Eyre and Zanthus to seek shelter, stand clear of windows and refrain from driving through floodwaters.

“If you live in parts of the Goldfields, Eucla and South Interior districts you should take action and stay safe with severe weather to come,” the department advised.

“This is not typical weather for southeastern Western Australia.”

The Leonora Laverton Road remained closed to traffic in both directions between Laverton and Leonora in the Goldfields region.

Lingering monsoonal storms continued to bring heavy rain to the Top End and northern WA, with large areas receiving between 100mm to 300mm of rain in recent days.

People in Fitzroy Crossing, Noonkanbah and Mount Barnett were warned to take emergency action with minor flooding expected on Tuesday and in the coming days.

DFES personnel were deployed to assist isolated communities after the Great Northern Highway was shut in both directions between Fitzroy Crossing and Halls Creek.

More rain is on the way with the potential for tropical cyclones to develop in the Indian Ocean, Gulf of Carpentaria and Coral Sea over the next week, the BOM warned.

– AAP

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