
PM sends army to help clean up after ‘devastating' NSW floods
Seventy Australian Defence Force personnel will be deployed to the NSW mid-north coast to assist with the cleanup from the devastating floods.
The troops will be on the ground from Tuesday alongside the veterans-led Disaster Relief Australia, helping to clear debris, reopen roads and conduct welfare checks on residents in the flood zone.
The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, announced the ADF deployments as the massive cleanup operation began for communities across the region.
'Unfortunately we are getting far too much experience in dealing with extreme weather events,' Albanese told a press conference inside the national situation room in Canberra.
Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email
'Science told us that there would be more frequent events and that they would be more intense, and that is what we are seeing playing out with a devastating impact on communities; most significantly, a devastating human impact, with five lives lost during this event, but also a significant environmental impact, and of course a significant economic impact as well.'
After defence helicopters were used to conduct search and rescue operations during the height of the flood emergency, a team of 70 ADF personnel was assembled to provide on-the-ground assistance, with a particular focus on clearing transport routes.
The reliance on the ADF in domestic natural disasters has long been a point of contention, with the Defence Strategic Review warning the military must be the 'force of last resort' to avoid stretching its resources.
The defence minister, Richard Marles, said coordination between levels of governments and the role of first-responders such as the SES was helping to ease the burden on the ADF.
'I think we are getting our policies better as we're moving forward, but when there is a moment when there is a crisis, and that call is made for Defence, Defence will always come,' Marles said.
Albanese said the ADF's presence also provided a morale boost to disaster-ravaged communities.
'From my experience, the presence of ADF personnel on the ground brings enormous confidence to communities that are really doing it tough. It's a sign of how seriously we as a nation are taking what is a catastrophic event,' he said.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
The ADF personnel were being assisted by a contingent from Disaster Relief Australia, which was due to scale up from 25 to 100 by the end of the week, as well as emergency services personnel from the ACT, Queensland, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, Western Australia, and New Zealand.
While flood waters had receded, federal disaster authorities were concerned about the impact a 'severe' cold front pushing through NSW would have on livestock that were stranded throughout the disaster.
Albanese spoke with the NSW premier, Chris Minns, on Monday morning as emergency financial support rolled out for affected residents, small businesses and councils.
The commonwealth's disaster recovery allowance – which provides up to 13 weeks of income for people unable to work due to the disaster – was opening at 2pm for residents in an initial group of four NSW council areas: Kempsey, Port Macquarie Hastings, MidCoast and Dungog.
Residents in 19 council areas were also eligible for personal hardship payments of $180 per adult and up to $900 per family for emergency food, clothing and medicines.
A $1m fund for councils to cover cleanup costs and a package of support for primary producers – which would include concessional loans and freight subsidies – was also expected to be approved at a federal cabinet meeting on Monday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
12 hours ago
- Reuters
China warns of more severe northern floods this summer
BEIJING, June 5 (Reuters) - Floods in northern China from June to August are likely to be more severe this year, authorities said on Thursday in an initial forecast for a region spanning densely populated cities to sprawling cropland vital to grain cultivation. Extreme storms and floods are set to be more frequent and more intense, state broadcaster CCTV cited the water resources ministry as saying. China is no stranger to summer floods, especially its south. But as global warming picks up pace, the entire country has been roiled by extreme swings from record precipitation to wilting drought, driving mitigation efforts, even in the historically drier north.


Daily Mail
15 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane weather: Aussie city shivers through its coldest day of 2025 as polar blast sends temperatures tumbling in Australia - so how cold will it get near you?
Sydney has recorded its coldest day of 2025 after a polar airmass, strong winds and showers send temperatures tumbling across Australia's southeast. Temperatures in the Harbour City had reached just 10C by 9am on Wednesday, with a 'feels like' temperature of a frigid 5.3C. Even colder weather was recorded across Greater Sydney, with Mount Boyce in the Blue Mountains dropping to 2.5C at 9:30am, which felt like –2.9C due to icy winds. Light snow was reported on parts of the Blue Mountains, with more expected across the alpine region this long weekend. Terrey Hills on Sydney's Northern Beaches reached just 8.7C at 9:30am, with temperatures feeling like 4.8C. Temperatures peaked at a maximum of 15C, two degrees below the June average. Sydneysiders are in for a slight reprieve on Thursday, with temperatures to hit 17C. But on Friday, temperatures will plunge once again to a chilly 6C. On the NSW coastline, a powerful low pressure system over the Tasman Sea is generating big swells along with powerful wind gusts and showers. A hazardous surf warning is in place for the Byron Bay Coast, Coffs Coast, Macquarie Coast, Hunter Coast, Sydney Coast and Illawarra Coast, with gale or strong wind warnings for the entire NSW coastline. Further west, Perth recorded its wettest day of the year, and since July of 2024. Perth picked up 47.6mm of rain during the 48 hours ending at 9am AWST on Wednesday, with 33.2mm falling in the last 24 hours. This marked the city's wettest day in 11 months. Bickley, southwest of Perth's CBD, recorded 41mm in the 24 hours to 9am on Wednesday - the suburb's heaviest daily rainfall in nine months. The wet weather is set to ease on Thursday and Friday, however a cold front could impact the state's southwest from early next week. Sydney Friday: Partly cloudy. Min 6 Max 18 Saturday: Mostly sunny. Min 10 Max 19 Sunday. Partly cloudy. Min 9 Max 18 Monday. Partly cloudy. Min 7 Max 16 Melbourne Friday: Showers increasing. Min 8 Max 14 Saturday: Showers increasing. Min 9 Max 15 Sunday: Showers. Min 7 Max 13 Monday: Showers. Min 6 Max 14 Hobart Friday: Shower or two. Min 4 Max 14 Saturday: Shower or two. Min 7 Max 14 Sunday. Showers increasing. Min 5 Max 14 Monday. Showers. Min 9 Max 14 Adelaide Friday: Showers. Min 8 Max 17 Saturday: Showers. Min 9 Max 16 Sunday: Showers. Min 7 Max 13 Monday: Showers. Min 6 Max 15 Canberra Friday: Morning frost, cloudy. Min -2 Max 13 Saturday: Shower or two. Min 2 Max 12 Sunday: Showers. Min 2 Max 10 Monday: Showers. Min 0 Max 9 Darwin Friday: Mostly sunny. Min 21 Max 32 Saturday: Sunny. Min 20 Max 31 Sunday: Mostly sunny. Min 22 Max 31 Monday: Mostly sunny. Min 20. Max 31 Brisbane Friday: Sunny. Min 9 Max 23 Saturday: Partly cloudy. Min 12 Max 24 Sunday: Mostly sunny. Min 11 Max 23 Perth Friday: Partly cloudy. Min 8 Max 19 Saturday: Sunny. Min 7 Max 20 Sunday: Sunny. Min 7 Max 21


The Guardian
18 hours ago
- The Guardian
Marine heatwave found to have engulfed area of ocean five times the size of Australia
Almost 40 million sq kilometres of ocean around south-east Asia and the Pacific – an area five times the size of Australia – was engulfed in a marine heatwave in 2024, a World Meteorological Organization (WMO) report has revealed. WMO scientists said the record heat – on land and in the ocean – was mostly driven by the climate crisis and coincided with a string of extreme weather events, from deadly landslides in the Philippines to floods in Australia and rapid glacier loss in Indonesia. The region was 0.48C hotter than the average recorded between 1991 and 2020, the WMO's State of the Climate report stated. Satellite measurements showed sea levels were rising almost 4mm per year – 'significantly higher' than the global average of 3.5mm, the report said. The WMO secretary general, Prof Celeste Saulo, said ocean heat and acidification had combined to 'inflict long-lasting damage' to marine ecosystems and economies. 'Sea-level rise is an existential threat to entire island nations. It is increasingly evident that we are fast running out of time to turn the tide,' Saulo said. The report said extreme events that coincided with 2024's heat included: Extreme rainfall in the Philippines in January and February causing flooding and landslides, killing at least 93 people. Early-season heatwave in Australia resulting in record August temperatures across the country's centre. Major flooding in Singapore and Malaysia, displacing 137,000 people and killing six. Flash flooding in March on the Indonesian island of Sumatra and major flooding in north Australia at the start of 2024. Rapid glacier loss in the west of New Guinea island, Indonesia, where the report said total ice loss could occur by 2026 or soon after. The Philippines struck by 12 tropical cyclones – double the average – with damage estimated at US$430m. Australia's snow season ended 'abnormally early'. Ben Churchill, the WMO director for the region, said: 'This is a message for stronger climate action. This report shows we're seeing things we have never seen before.' The report found that in January, April, May and June last year, almost 40 million sq kilometres of the region's ocean surface experienced moderate to strong heatwaves. The ocean heat also drove the fifth mass coral bleaching across Australia's Great Barrier Reef since 2016, causing widespread coral death. Assoc Prof Alex Sen Gupta, a climate scientist at the University of New South Wales, said the heatwave was 'pretty remarkable' and was part of a record-breaking jump in ocean temperatures globally that started in 2023. 'We've really never seen anything like it and we're struggling to explain why we saw such a big jump,' Sen Gupta said. The heatwave will have stressed many organisms in the ocean that have temperature thresholds, he said. 'If you go beyond them, the organism starts to fail – they either move or die.'