A weekend of wet weather has continued in one state as others brace for severe thunderstorms, strong winds and potential flash flooding.Â
Intense and heavy rain has blanketed parts of Queensland with the Bureau of Meteorology issuing flood watches for southeast regions and surrounding catchments.Â
Minor flood warnings are in place for the Bremer River and Warrill Creek, Burrum River and Mary River, while a flood warning has been issued for the Logan River.
⚠�⛈�Severe thunderstorm — Bureau of Meteorology, Queensland (@BOM_Qld) #warning update: severe thunderstorms continuing in northern and central #Qld. Details and updates: https://t.co/FBmpsInT9o pic.twitter.com/vS04UKJzm6January 12, 2025
Further north, a severe thunderstorm warning for large hailstones, damaging winds and heavy rainfall has been issued for eastern parts of Central Queensland, stretching into the Lower Burdekin and Herbert regions.
Wind gusts of 106km/h were observed at Hughenden on Sunday afternoon.Â
The Bureau of Meteorology has also rolled out severe thunderstorm warnings for Victoria and Tasmania.
The storms will likely bring heavy, locally intense rainfall to parts of the North West Coast and Central Plateau areas of Tasmania, the bureau said
The storms could lead to dangerous and life-threatening flash flooding through Sunday afternoon.
Part of rain-soaked Queensland are bracing for more severe thunderstorms. (Jason O'BRIEN/AAP PHOTOS)
In Victoria, strong winds and flash flooding are possible with thunderstorms in the central and eastern regions.
Winds of almost 100km/h were recorded at East Sale Airport on Sunday afternoon.Â
Residents took to social media to post videos of flooding across roads and in the centre of towns in Queensland's South Burnett region.
Emergency services were called to rescue people trapped in their cars due to floods on Friday.Â
Senior meteorologist Angus Hines said Sunday would be another wet and stormy day in the not-so-Sunshine State with high rainfall totals and extensive thunderstorms.
Widespread showers & thunderstorms are expected across eastern — Bureau of Meteorology, Australia (@BOM_au) #Aus today.Storms have already begun in #Tas, #Vic & #WA & will develop in #Qld, #NSW & #ACT.The maps below show where severe thunderstorms are likely (🔴) or may (🟡) occur today.Latest: https://t.co/jlOoTZL1iF pic.twitter.com/lLaOb20AgOJanuary 12, 2025
"We've got broad risks of severe thunderstorms stretching all the way from Townsville down to Brisbane," he told AAP.
"Another very active day likely to bring some further weather impact, flash flooding, road closures, possible damage to trees, property, crops, as well as potential for power outages."
Mr Hines said while the central Queensland coast had the highest flood risk for Sunday, the risk for all other regions should not be downplayed.
"Flash flooding would happen very quickly if further rainfall fell in those places because of how wet it has been - the ground can't really soak up a lot more rain," he said.
The bureau forecasts showers and storms to continue into the week, and although the intensity is expected to come down a couple of notches, severe weather remains a risk into Wednesday.