Homes without power and buildings damaged across Top End after Tropical Cyclone Fina brings gales and torrential rain

1 week ago 25

Top End residents are preparing to launch into cleanup mode after a night of damaging winds and heavy rain from Tropical Cyclone Fina.

With top gusts of 195km/h and sustained winds of 140km/h near the centre of the system, Fina tore down trees, damaged houses and cut power in many places across Darwin and surrounding areas. It also brought torrential rain, with 168.6mm falling at Darwin airport in the 24 hours to 9am Sunday.

The storm was the strongest cyclone to approach the Northern Territory capital since Cyclone Tracy devastated the city in 1974, but as of Sunday morning, there were no reports of serious injuries or damage.

Households in and around Darwin, where gusts reached 107km/h, had been asked by emergency authorities to stay in their homes or emergency shelters. The warning was still in place on Sunday morning.

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A category 3 system, Fina brought destructive winds and heavy downpours to remote Tiwi Islands communities, then Darwin and surrounds on Saturday and into Sunday.

Trees down in Darwin
As well as strong wind gusts, Fina also brought torrential rain, with 168.6mm falling at Darwin airport in the 24 hours to 9am Sunday. Photograph: (A)manda Parkinson/The Guardian

It was a noisy and in many cases sleepless night for Darwin residents as high winds rattled, banged and shook everything in their path, with sweeping sheets of rain on the streets.

Emergency shelters were open in Darwin, nearby Palmerston and adjacent rural areas, with people urged to bring their own bedding and food.

Around 7am on Sunday, people began emerging from their homes, and authorities began a cleanup survey.

Toppled trees in Darwin had damaged fences, powerlines and pavements.

Part of a ceiling at the Royal Darwin hospital collapsed on Saturday but no one was hurt, Emma Carter of NT police told ABC Radio Darwin. The hospital was already placed on code brown amid ongoing staff shortages, and was open only to emergencies, with all other presentations being redirected.

The NT chief minister, Lia Finocchiaro, told ABC radio that no patients were impacted by the ceiling collapse and assessments would begin on Sunday to repair it.

PowerWater reported power outages across Darwin and coastal areas, and said in a statement its crews had started damage assessment and would work to restore power “as soon as it is safe to do so”.

The Optus general manager for the Northern Territory, Dave Morissey, told the ABC on Sunday morning that 15 mobile sites were offline, with technicians working on getting them back online, and eight mobile sites were running on generators.

Telstra was also reporting widespread outages affecting some mobile, NBN and landline services in the NT, with some mobile towers expected to be out until Monday and many internet and phone services in Darwin estimated to be out of action until Tuesday evening.

On Nitsa Kotis’s street a 10m palm tree fell – away from homes – onto power lines, blocking the road and cutting power.

“I haven’t even been out the back of my place yet to see the damage, I’ve been too busy socialising with the neighbours,” Ms Kotis told Guardian Australia.

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Neighbours spilled out onto the street on Saturday morning to inspect the damage, some charging phones and devices from their car batteries, others just milling over their nights.

Woman standing in street
A palm tree came down on Nitsa Kotis's street in Darwin's north. Photograph: (A)manda Parkinson/The Guardian

“I went to my daughter’s house in Muir Head – it was loud, but this morning out there it was like there was no cyclone,” one resident said.

Cyclone Fina also stirred up a rare swell on Darwin beaches.

Despite the crocs and stingers, some surfers braved the conditions to catch a wave.

Brad Cosway was out with his friend Craig Dawson on Sunday for a kite surf at Windsurfers Corner in Nightcliff.

“I don’t want to surf with the crocs, but they aren’t feeding in the saltwater,” he said.

“Plenty of these guys have been out surfing here for 30 years and no one has ever been taken.”

Person takes photo of ocean from cliff top
Residents watch large swell off Darwin after Cyclone Fina. Photograph: (A)manda Parkinson/The Guardian

The Bureau of Meteorology advised early on Sunday Fina was moving away from the coast but a warning zone was still in place for Wadeye to Cape Hotham, including Darwin, the Tiwi Islands, Dundee Beach, Milikapiti, Pirlangimpi and Wurrumiyanga.

By late morning it was tracking 110km west of Darwin, moving west-south-west at 10km/h. It was still classified as a category 3 cyclone and could intensify to category 4, but the very destructive core of the storm was well off the north-west Top End coast, the NT government said.

Fina was forecast to remain a severe tropical cyclone during Sunday as it moves south-west through the southern Timor Sea and was predicted to start weakening on Monday as it nears the north of the Kimberley coast. Gales were not expected to extend to Wyndham or Kununurra.

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