Floods Kill 2 People and Wreak Havoc in Australia’s Queensland After Monsoon Rains 

04 February 2025, Australia, Townsville: An aerial view of the flooded the Cardwell area in North Queensland. Monsoon rains and flooding in Queensland have claimed the lives of at least two people. (Adam Head/NEWS CORP AUSTRALIA/dpa)
04 February 2025, Australia, Townsville: An aerial view of the flooded the Cardwell area in North Queensland. Monsoon rains and flooding in Queensland have claimed the lives of at least two people. (Adam Head/NEWS CORP AUSTRALIA/dpa)
TT
20

Floods Kill 2 People and Wreak Havoc in Australia’s Queensland After Monsoon Rains 

04 February 2025, Australia, Townsville: An aerial view of the flooded the Cardwell area in North Queensland. Monsoon rains and flooding in Queensland have claimed the lives of at least two people. (Adam Head/NEWS CORP AUSTRALIA/dpa)
04 February 2025, Australia, Townsville: An aerial view of the flooded the Cardwell area in North Queensland. Monsoon rains and flooding in Queensland have claimed the lives of at least two people. (Adam Head/NEWS CORP AUSTRALIA/dpa)

Monsoon rains unleashed flooding in Australia’s Queensland that have claimed the lives of two people as the week-long deluge dropped months of rainfall in a few days, devastating small rural towns on the state’s north coast.

The body of an 82-year-old woman was found on Tuesday in a paddock near the North Queensland town of Ingham. It followed the death of a 63-year-old woman on Sunday when the rescue boat she was traveling in struck a tree and flipped.

The rain drove hundreds from their homes, washed out an important bridge and blocked drinking water supplies to the worst-hit area.

Queensland’s north coast is regularly battered by tropical storms, but the destruction caused by this week’s downpour was “quite frankly incredible,” said the state premier David Crisafulli.

A few hundred people remained in evacuation centers on Tuesday as the flooding subsided; it was not yet known how many homes were damaged beyond repair.

The receding waters eased fears that the region’s largest city, Townsville, might face similar havoc to what was recorded in 2019, when floods caused more than 1 billion Australian dollars ($620 million) in damage.

Still, about 2 meters (6.5 feet) of water fell across the state since Saturday, with six months of rain recorded in some areas. A bridge that provides a critical highway link collapsed into the Ollera Creek near Ingham on Sunday, likely hindering recovery efforts and causing long travel delays.

Fewer than 10,000 properties were without power on Tuesday and Crisafulli said officials were working with the military to deliver generators. A severe thunderstorm warning was still in place for parts of the area.

Meteorologists said the monsoon rains were prompted by two tropical low pressure systems, one from a marine heatwave in the Coral Sea — the same atmospheric conditions that have caused floods in the state before. Rising ocean temperatures due to climate change have increased the frequency of such events in Australia.

Meanwhile, scorching temperatures were recorded Tuesday on the other side of Australia, with parts of Western Australia warned of an extreme or severe heatwave, the Bureau of Meteorology said. The agency’s website posted either heatwave or thunderstorm warnings for most states.

Summer weather extremes in Australia have provoked deadly bushfires and record floods in recent years.



Copper Cable Thefts in Spain Leave Passengers Trapped in Trains Overnight

Passengers wait to be given access to their trains after cable stolen from a high-speed train line between Madrid and Andalusia caused delays at Atocha station in Madrid, Spain, May 5, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera
Passengers wait to be given access to their trains after cable stolen from a high-speed train line between Madrid and Andalusia caused delays at Atocha station in Madrid, Spain, May 5, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera
TT
20

Copper Cable Thefts in Spain Leave Passengers Trapped in Trains Overnight

Passengers wait to be given access to their trains after cable stolen from a high-speed train line between Madrid and Andalusia caused delays at Atocha station in Madrid, Spain, May 5, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera
Passengers wait to be given access to their trains after cable stolen from a high-speed train line between Madrid and Andalusia caused delays at Atocha station in Madrid, Spain, May 5, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera

Copper thieves brought part of Spain's high-speed train network to a standstill on Sunday evening, leaving some trapped in trains overnight and thousands stranded at stations.
Thieves stole cables in four areas within a 10-kilometer radius in what Transport Minister Oscar Puente called a "serious act of sabotage" in a post on X.
Train services on the affected lines were suspended Sunday evening, and while on Monday morning a few trains left Madrid for Toledo, 70 kilometers south, services to cities such as Seville and Malaga further south were still suspended, Adif said on X, according to Reuters.
Thousands of people were left waiting in Madrid's Atocha station. It comes after hundreds of passengers were left trapped on trains last week during a nationwide blackout.
Nine trains were left stranded between stations, with many passengers forced to spend the night onboard, according to interviews on state broadcaster TVE.
The state-owned railway infrastructure operator Adif said its staff were working to replace the stolen cables and reestablish the service.
The high-speed network has rapidly expanded in Spain as part of a government push to decarbonize public transport.
The network connects almost all the country's big cities but is vulnerable to cable thefts because it crosses large swathes of empty countryside.