That concludes our coverage of today’s weather events, which saw Sydney receive more rain in a single day than it normally does in a month.
Sydney is bracing for more intense rain in the coming hours, with 200 mm forecast overnight in some places.
Residents in Chipping Norton have been ordered to evacuate homes in low-lying areas.
Just northwest of Sydney, residents living near the Hawkesbury have been told to prepare to evacuate.
So far, the city has borne the brunt of the bad weather, receiving 159 mm of rain between 9am Thursday and 8pm on Friday night.
Wahroonga received 154 mm over the same period, while Mosman received 121 mm followed by Penrith at 120 mm.
Here’s the other big events that have been unfolding throughout today.
- The State Emergency Services is urging people in Sydney, Wollongong, Nowra, Batemans Bay and Goulburn to stay indoors this evening, with six-hourly rainfall totals of between 50 and 90 mm likely, and reaching up to 220 mm over the Illawarra escarpment.
- In Sydney’s southwest, the Bureau of Meteorology has said moderate flooding is expected at Liverpool and Milperra on Saturday morning.
- The Bureau of Meteorology has issued major flood warnings from parts of northwest and southwest Sydney, with thunderstorms possibly bringing locally intense rainfall.
- Five people have been flown to hospital after two cars collided in the state’s west, several roads have been closed and some parts of Sydney have been told to prepare to evacuate after the city received more than a month’s worth of rain in a single day.
- In the past 24 hours, there have been 825 calls for help to the SES
- Wakehurst Parkway has been closed due to flooding from 4.30pm on Friday. As of 9pm on Friday night it was still closed.
- On the Northern Rivers, a local farmer rescued a man from floodwater outside his farm near Lismore this morning. The Wilsons River at Lismore peaked at 3.8 metres this morning, lower than the minor flood level it was expected to hit overnight.
- Warragamba Dam – which supplies much of Sydney’s drinking water – is expected to spill on Monday morning as the catchment fills. Water NSW chief executive Andrew George said the dam was currently at 96.3 per cent of capacity, meaning the 100 to 150 millimetres of rain expected would cause the dam to fill and spill.
- Across NSW, there are currently 45 warnings. Two of these are at the ‘Watch and Act’ level, with the remainder at ‘Advice’ level.
Stay safe out there.