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Category 3 Tropical Cyclone Debbie Pounding Queensland, Australia

March 27, 2017, 4:23 PM EDT

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Above: Tropical Cyclone Debbie, as seen on Monday afternoon (local time), 03:50 UTC March 27, 2017. Image credit: NASA.

Tropical Cyclone Debbie is battering Northeast Australia’s Queensland coast with torrential rains and high winds as it heads west-southwest at about 5 mph towards an expected landfall near 2 pm EDT (18 UTC) Monday. Debbie intensified into a Category 3 storm with 115 mph winds on Monday morning U.S. time, and satellite images on Monday morning showed an impressive storm with a well-defined eye surrounded by eyewall thunderstorms with very cold cloud tops that were increasing in intensity.

Winds at Hamilton Island in the south eyewall of Debbie were 82 mph (10-minute average), gusting to 107 mph at 2:00 am local time Tuesday (12 pm EDT or 16:00 UTC Monday), and winds at Hardy Reef were sustained at 63 mph, gusting to 93 mph at 11 pm local time. According to storm surge expert Dr. Hal Needham, storm surge levels were beginning to build on Monday afternoon (local time) at several sites along the Queensland coast. Laguna Quays, Mackay and Dalrymple Bay all reported storm surge levels exceeding 0.5 m (1.64 ft).  Water levels should increase through the night as Debbie approaches the coastline, with storm surge exceeding 2.5 m (8.2 ft) in localized areas between Bowen and Mackay. Debbie has favorable conditions for intensification, with light wind shear and warm ocean temperatures of 28 - 29°C (82 - 84°F.) However, Debbie does not have much time to intensify before landfall, and will likely be at Category 3 strength then.
 

Tropical Cyclone Debbie radar
Figure 1. Tropical Cyclone Debbie nearing landfall as seen by radar at 16:00 UTC  (12 pm EDT) March 27, 2017. Image credit: Australia Bureau of Meteorology.

Tropical cyclone history of the Queensland, Australia coast

According to NOAA’s historical Hurricane Tracks tool, Queensland has been hit by nine tropical cyclones of Category 3 or higher strength on the Saffir-Simpson Scale since 1989. Four of these storms have hit since 2011:

Tropical Cyclone Marcia hit central Queensland near Shoalwater Bay as a Category 4 storm with 145 mph winds on February 20, 2015, causing $590 million in damage. No fatalities were reported.
Tropical Cyclone Nathan hit far northern Queensland as a Category 3 storm with 115 mph winds on March 19, 2015, causing $57 million in damage.
Tropical Cyclone Ita hit Cape Flattery, Queensland as a Category 4 storm with 145 mph winds on April 12, 2014, causing over $1 billion in damage to agriculture. Ita killed 40 people in the Solomon Islands while it was forming (thanks go to WU member elioe for this correction.)

Queensland suffered a devastating blow on February 3, 2011, when Tropical Cyclone Yasi made landfall in northern Queensland as a Category 4 storm with 155 mph winds, killing 1 and causing $2.5 billion in damage (2011 dollars.) Yasi was the most damaging tropical cyclone in Australian history.

The Australian Bureau of Meteorology has a nice summary of the major to storms to impact Queensland before 2011.

The Atlantic’s first Invest of 2017, 90L, not likely to develop

A large area of low pressure a few hundred miles east of the Bahamas was designated as the season’s first Atlantic “Invest”—Invest 90L—by NHC on Sunday. 90L is over waters that are near 24°C (75°F)—barely warm enough to support formation of a subtropical depression or subtropical storm. Satellite loops on Monday morning showed that 90L had a vigorous circulation, but little in the way of organized heavy thunderstorm activity. With wind shear a very high 50 - knots, and with the low headed northeastwards over cooler waters, development into a subtropical storm is unlikely. 90L will pass a few hundred miles southeast of Bermuda on Tuesday. According to NOAA’s Historical Hurricane Tracks, the only March tropical cyclone ever recorded in the Atlantic was a Category 2 hurricane that passed through the Lesser Antilles on March 8, 1908.

Hurricanes Matthew and Otto get their names retired

The World Meteorological Organization  (WMO) announced on Monday that two major hurricanes in the Atlantic from 2016—Matthew and Otto—had their names retired from the active list of hurricane names. Matthew and Otto are the 81st and 82nd names to be removed from the Atlantic list.  The WMO will replace Matthew with Martin and Otto with Owen when the 2016 lists are used again in 2022.

Bowen Australia radar loop courtesy of Brian McNoldy.

Jeff Masters

Bob Henson contributed to this post.

The views of the author are his/her own and do not necessarily represent the position of The Weather Company or its parent, IBM.

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Dr. Jeff Masters

Dr. Jeff Masters co-founded Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. in air pollution meteorology at the University of Michigan. He worked for the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990 as a flight meteorologist.

emailweatherman.masters@gmail.com

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