East Coast Low (2006-03-03)

By 0800UTC 2 March a large area of strong to gale force winds had developed in the onshore flow off the southern Queensland coast. This occurred as a low pressure system formed ENE of Rockhampton and a large high moved into the Tasman Sea.

By 2000UTC 2 March the low had deepened and moved down to the east of Fraser Island while high pressures were maintained over northern New South Wales. Wave heights began to increase during Friday the 3 March on the south Queensland buoys and at this stage more rapidly on the Sunshine Coast than on the buoys further south.

Twenty fours hours later at 2000UTC 3 March the low did not noticeably deepen but moved closer towards the higher pressure, which was maintained at 1018 hPa over the period at Coffs Harbour. As a result an intense pressure gradient with gale to storm force onshore winds had developed off the south Queensland Coast.

Later that evening at 0800UTC 4 March the quikscat data indicated gale force winds extending out at least 400km east of the coast. The maximum wind averaged over 10minutes was from Cape Moreton 53knots at 1430UTC 3 March 2006. Wind damage affected many areas of Southeast Queensland.

A Counter Disaster and Rescue Service spokeswoman said volunteers had been "flat out" as trees crushed houses and cars. A nursing home at Kirra was evacuated when a tree fell on a unit. No residents were injured.

In Brisbane, residents of a unit block in Wooloowin and a house in Chermside were lucky to escape when trees fell on their properties. Traffic accidents kept police busy and one vehicle crashed into a house at St Lucia. Energex staff were braced for action as blackouts hit about 100,000 homes and businesses from Friday morning to Sunday afternoon.

At Mt Tamborine and Bonogin boggy grounds hampered restoration efforts and in Beaudesert trees and branches continued to damage wires. In Moreton Bay on Sunday 5 March boats were damaged and ripped from their moorings. One of these yachts was found later in the week at Noosa Heads.

The second highest significant wave height since 1976 was recorded at the EPA's Brisbane wave recording station on Saturday (4 March). Significant wave heights up to 7.2m were recorded by an EPA wave monitoring buoy located 10km southeast of Point Lookout, North Stradbroke Island while individual waves up to 15.0m (and possibly 16.7m) were also recorded.

Significant wave heights of 5.4m, 5.3m and 5.5m were also recorded respectively at the Sunshine Coast, Gold Coast and Tweed Heads wave recorders. These waves were the second, fifth and third highest wave events at these sites.

A significant storm surge occurred with stormwater outlets blocked by surging waves and this caused localised flooding of low lying coastal areas such as Flat Rock Creek and Marine Parade Kirra. The mayor of Redcliffe said there was a significant storm surge in Moreton Bay though following the first Severe Weather Warning sand bagging was carried out and this prevented large-scale erosion.

This event is classified as an East Coast Low.

More about East Coast Lows
Harden Up
Bureau of Meteorology website
The Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research report