23 January 2025, 1:21 AM
The storm cell the Bureau of Meteorology warned of this morning has swept through the Northern Rivers and the Far North Coast, causing widespread damage and causing power outages impacting over 25,600 households and businesses.
Superintendent (Supt) Scott McLennan from the NSW SES Eastern Zone said the storm began in Grafton and gradually made its way up along the ranges striking Casino, Kyogle, Lismore, Nimbin, Uki before hitting the Tweed Valley.
Gusts of wind were being recorded between 70 and 80 kmh, but there were wind gusts of up to 102 kmh at Cape Byron.
"We're currently sitting at 196 incidents across the region. The vast majority of those are in and around the Mullumbimby, Tweed Heads, and Murwillumbah areas. But Ballina, Lismore and Casino are also dealing with their fair share.
(Trees down on Kyogle Road earlier today. Photo: Annemarie Spicer)
"We are working with and coordinating a lot of those jobs with our friends from the New South Wales RFS as well as Fire and Rescue New South Wales. A lot of the incidents that are coming in are related to trees across roads. So, that's where our friends from RFS Fire and Rescue, as well as Transport New South Wales and the councils are dealing with those road issues, and we're getting to the people with houses issues.
"We're expecting more jobs will be called in this afternoon when people get home from work. So, we're just asking you to bear with us. We'll get to you as soon as possible. We are triaging and getting to them as soon as we can. We have crews out on the ground now. We have more crews on their way into those impacted areas."
As a result of the trees down, a large portion of the Northern Rivers has been left without power.
A spokesperson for Essential Energy said, "At around 8.30am, around 4,000 customers were left without power in the Northern Rivers region, mainly around Lismore, Kyogle and Casino.
"By 9.30am, the following towns and surrounding areas were impacted including rural communities:
"Essential Energy crews will be working to restore power as soon as it is safe to do so.
"Our website outages page is being updated with impacted locations, estimated restoration times when known, outage cause and where challenges are being faced in restoring supply.
"Essential Energy is on call 24/7 and, in an emergency, crews will work as quickly as safety and conditions allow to restore power to the homes, hospitals, schools, businesses and services that form part of each community that we service.
"In the event of a storm, it’s important that everyone keeps safety front of mind and stays aware and safe."
To prepare for a storm:
If you see any of these things, stay at least 8 metres away and call Essential Energy on 13 20 80 to report the damage. In an emergency, always call 000.