Aaron Bunch Journalist with Australian Associated Press | Collection of published work | + 61 484 008 119 | abunch@aap.com.au

Aaron Bunch
Concern in the Pilbara as Cyclone Ilsa strengthens

Residents and workers in Western Australia’s Pilbara are bracing as Tropical Cyclone Ilsa, now a category-four system, bears down on the coast.

April 13, 2023

Concern is growing in the Pilbara as Tropical Cyclone Ilsa strengthens into a category-four system and bears down on the West Australian coast.

The cyclone was upgraded by the Bureau of Meteorology on Thursday morning and is now 290km north of Port Hedland.

Mayor Peter Carter said the system was likely to cross the coast closer to the mining town of about 16,000 people than initially forecast.

“What’s happening with this cyclone is very unusual and a lot of people are getting very worried because it’s getting closer and closer to Port Hedland,” he told AAP.

He said an eerie quiet had descended over town as residents prepared for the impact of the cyclone.

“It’s very subdued. There’s not a lot of wind (yet) and there’s light drizzle and light cloud,” he said.

“At the moment it’s very quiet but this thing is supposed to hit us in 14 hours (and) that could change again.

“The longer it stays out in the ocean the bigger it’s going to get (and) the more powerful it’s going to get.”

Ilsa is expected to cross the coast near Pardoo Roadhouse, 150km northeast of Port Hedland, in the early hours of Friday.

Manager Will Batth will stay at the remote service station with a colleague while the cyclone passes.

“We haven’t had any as strong as this in many years. This is a big one,” he said.

“(But) there’s no point in worrying. I can’t stop it.”

Mr Batth said a few cars were still travelling on the North West Coastal Highway but the roadhouse had closed for business and staff had evacuated to Port Hedland.

Wind gusts of up to 275km/h are likely near the cyclone’s centre as it crosses the coast.

Mr Carter said an evacuation centre had been set up in Port Hedland for residents who don’t feel safe in their homes and the town’s massive port that exports iron ore around the world had been emptied of ships.

“Most infrastructure is designed for cyclones. It’s the flying debris that we worry about,” Mr Carter said.

“Your wheelie bin, your barbecue, your gas bottle … put it away. No one wants them to become missiles.”

Communities from Bidyadanga to Whim Creek, including Port Hedland and inland to Marble Bar, Nullagine and Telfer, have been urged to keep their emergency kits on hand.

Abnormally high tides, destructive winds and up to 400mm of rain are forecast.

Workers and tourists at Eighty Mile Beach caravan park and nearby Wallal Downs cattle station have been evacuated, along with non-critical workers from Newcrest’s Telfer mine and Fortescue Metal Group and BHP’s sites across the region.

Extra emergency workers, essential supplies and aircraft have been sent to the area.

Communities from Beagle Bay to Broome have been given the all-clear but have been asked to watch out for residual damage, including fallen trees and power lines.

Ilsa is forecast to maintain tropical cyclone intensity into Friday as it tracks inland to Telfer and moves east.

The system is expected to weaken below tropical cyclone strength overnight on Friday before moving east into southern parts of the Northern Territory.

It is the first category-four system to strike the region in almost a decade.

The last, named Tropical Cyclone Christine, crossed the coast southwest of Port Hedland in December 2013.

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