A flood warning sign starts to disappear below floodwaters
near Charleville, about 685 km west of Brisbane.
REUTERS/Queensland Police Service
Thousands of Australians have been forced from their
homes because of floods that have risen to record levels in
some areas and killed one person, and authorities issued
warnings for more than a dozen rivers in Queensland and New
South Wales states.
Australia's coal industry, which is concentrated in
Queensland and New South Wales, was largely unaffected,
easing concern about a repeat of last year's disastrous
floods that sent global coal prices soaring.
But heavy rain is expected to take a toll on the region's
agriculture, particularly on cotton, sugarcane, soybean and
corn.
About 2,500 people were evacuated from the Queensland town of
St. George, where flooding is expected to reach a record
level of 14 metres or higher, state police said.
"We're hearing from people whose families have lived on the
property for 100 or more years who've never seen water in
their homes who have now got water up to the roof,"
Queensland Premier Anna Bligh told Sky news.
"So we know that something that's never been seen before is
on its way."
St. George was also hit in 2011, when flash floods across
Queensland and New South Wales killed about 35 people,
swamped 30,000 houses, and wiped out roads, bridges and rail
lines.
The flooding across the two states this year has resulted in
tens of thousands of people being cut off in the last few
days, with some having to battle with deadly snakes as they
scrambled for dry ground.
The Australian Bureau of Meteorology has forecast that
flooding will continue for weeks in some areas.
The town of Moree, the centre of the New South Wales' cotton
industry was cut in half by record floodwaters, and some
estimated that each farm in the area could lose hundreds of
thousands of dollars worth of crops.
Australia is the world's largest coal exporter and accounts
for roughly two-thirds of global trade of coking coal, used
for steel production. The 2011 floods pushed up global coal
prices as production was brought to a near standstill.
"The coal mines themselves are not experiencing any
difficulties," Queensland Resources Council chief executive
Michael Roche said.
"So far, the Queensland coal industry, as far as we are
aware, has missed the flooding."
On Friday, Whitehaven Coal said it had shut four mines
because of heavy rain, but the mines were not flooded and no
equipment had been damaged.
Global miner Xstrata said there was no impact on its
operations.
"It's business as usual," spokeswoman Kathryn Lamond said.
But the industry was still concerned about disruption if
there was no let-up in the rain and more flooding, Roche
said.
Many mines are still carrying significant volumes of water
from last year's floods, so more heavy rain is a danger.
Storm damage was estimated to have cut Australia's
commodity-weighted economy's gross domestic product growth
(GDP) by A$20 billion, or 1.5 percent, in the 2010-2011
financial year.
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