The Gold Coast Bulletin

Cyclone overdue on Coast

- ALISTER THOMSON

THE severe bushfires that have devastated parts of the Hinterland are not the only extreme weather event Gold Coasters should be worried about, a leading weatherwar­ning company says.

ASX-listed Aeeris has analysed extreme weather patterns dating back to the mid19th century and believes the Glitter Strip is overdue for a direct hit by a category 3 cyclone, which it believes would leave large parts of the city under water.

The last one to hit the city was in 1954 – referred to as the Great Gold Coast Cyclone. It caused massive flooding and evacuation­s at Macintosh Island. Cars were picked up by 2m of water brought up by waves on to the highway at Kirra, and the entire Byron Bay fishing fleet of 22 boats and the outer section of the jetty were swept away.

Aeeris founder and managing director Kerry Plowright said the collective memory is short and people forget that historical­ly extreme weather events occurred with great frequency until modern times.

“These fires raging now are a great example,” he said.

“Fires are not exactly unknown to Queensland. There were very significan­t fires in 1951 and 1953 but there weren’t many people living here.

“It gets forgotten and it goes to the heart of this story, which is these things have a bad habit of revisiting us.”

Aeeris has used Bureau of Meteorolog­y archives, newspaper accounts and anecdotal informatio­n to map cyclones that have hit the Australian east coast since 1858.

Mr Plowright said cyclones hit the southeast corner, often affecting the Gold Coast and Tweed regions, in great number in the late 19th century.

In April 1892 a tropical cyclone “recurved” over Brisbane and the resulting southeaste­rly winds hit the Gold Coast, uprooting trees, blowing off roofs and smashing in windows at the Southport hotel, the Aeeris report says.

At Tweed Heads two hotels and the police station were badly damaged.

The 1954 cyclone crossed the Coast at Coolangatt­a and caused widespread structural damage on the Gold Coast.

Mr Plowright said the effect would be more damaging today. “Large parts of the Gold Coast would go under water, certainly a lot of the canal estates. If that came through today that would be catastroph­ic,” he said.

Mr Plowright said it had been 65 years since the Gold Coast was hit by a category 3 cyclone.

“Going back further in the southeast corner there were cyclones every five years for a period,” he said.

Aeeris senior meteorolog­ist Anthony Cornelius said there was reasonable evidence to point towards the Gold Coast being overdue for a direct hit by a cyclone.

“We have had a few close calls in the past,” he said.

“Even if you say you had a few in the late 1800s and another in 1954 … and the best case scenario is an average of one every 50 years, well 1954 is nearly 70 years ago.”

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