Factual. Independent. Impartial.
Support AAP with a free or paid subscription
General
Laine Clark

Rainfall eases but flooding ongoing concern for region

Communities in northern Queensland have been cut off by floods, but heavy rainfall is easing. (Scott Radford-Chisholm/AAP PHOTOS)

Recovery efforts may soon become the focus for rain-hit regions but flooding remains an ongoing concern after days of downpours.

Record-breaking rain has lashed north Queensland, sparking floods that have cut power, damaged roads and forced hundreds of people to flee their homes.

There has been some relief with heavy rainfall easing, providing hope a massive clean-up facing the inundated region is set to finally begin.

However the Bureau of Meteorology has warned major flooding is ongoing in multiple catchments despite the isolated and less widespread showers.

Major flood warnings were still in place for the Herbert and Haughton River catchments late on Tuesday after the region had been lashed by rain.

Water up to the railway line at Giru, south of Townsville
Major flood warnings are still in place for the Herbert and Haughton River catchment areas.

"Water is still moving through these catchment systems so that risk of riverine flooding will continue...likely over the next few days as we gradually start to see river levels falling," the bureau's Miriam Bradbury said.

Widespread 24 hour rainfall totals across the coast dropped to 50mm to 100mm, with Mackay copping 193mm with around 200mm along the coastline spanning Cairns and Innisfail.

However the bureau warned cumulative rainfall totals from the past week were driving the ongoing flood risk for the region.

Seven-day rainfall totals surpassed one metre for some areas with 1697mm recorded at Cardwell Range, 1693mm at Rollingstone and 1662mmm at Macknade Sugar Mill.

"Now that's a huge amount of water to be moving through our waterways, rivers and creeks and is accounting for that ongoing flood risk ...over the coming days," Ms Bradbury said.

Aerial footage released by PolAir has shown the extent of flooding in the Townsville region.

Ingham has been one of the worst hit, with power and road access cut as the nearby Herbert River rose beyond a 15.2m flood record set almost 60 years ago.

The community is reeling after an elderly woman's body was found in a cane field on Tuesday.

The 82-year-old became the second flood-related fatality after days of downpours that have completely isolated the town, with fresh water, food and diesel supplies believed to be running low.

The Ingham community had already been rocked after a 63-year-old woman died when an SES boat helping people through floodwaters struck a tree and flipped on Sunday.

However the Townsville community is breathing easier after the Ross River fell short of peaking at a major flood level on Tuesday morning.

It allayed fears that floodwaters would rival those that devastated the region in 2019, when two lives were lost and thousands of homes inundated.

License this article

Sign up to read this article for free
Choose between a free or paid subscription to AAP News
Start reading
Already a member? Sign in here
Top stories on AAP right now