Thanks for joining us for our coverage of the Mid North Coast floods. We will have more for you in the next live news coverage.
Here’s the key points you need to know as we wrap up for the day:
- More than 48,000 people have been isolated by flooding on the NSW Mid North Coast, as unprecedented floodwaters cut off or inundated thousands of homes. Emergency services have responded to 284 flood rescues in the Mid North Coast and Hunter region in the past 24 hours, including 150 since midnight, as 280 millimetres of rainfall hit the area.
- The Manning River at Taree is at a level never seen before, breaking an almost 100-year record as it passed six metres early on Wednesday. Taree has experienced one-third of its annual average rainfall in the past two days.
- Access to disaster funding has been activated at both the state and federal levels.
- Severe rainfall could continue until Friday, including in Port Macquarie and Coffs Harbour. Up to 200 millimetres is forecast for some areas. Emergency warnings have been issued for more than a dozen towns in the region.
- Andrew Gissing, the chief executive of Natural Hazards Research Australia, said the flooding was the biggest on record for the area, and a one-in-500-year event.
With more rain on the forecast tomorrow, we’ll be live again first thing on Thursday morning with all the latest updates as the situation develops.