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New weather radar gives Central Queensland communities better rain, wind and storm awareness

BOM

Images from the newly installed weather radar in the Taroom region are now live on the Bureau of Meteorology’s website and BOM Weather app, meaning communities can better track severe weather.

Bureau of Meteorology Chief Customer Officer Dr Peter Stone said the weather radar would assist people across the Fitzroy, Condamine and Burnett River catchments to track rain, wind, storms and severe weather.

“Dual-polarised Doppler technology weather radars are one of the best tools for observing real-time rainfall and wind conditions across large areas, and we know this information is highly valuable for communities, particularly primary producers,” he said.

“Images from the radar are now live on the Bureau’s website and app will benefit communities as far as Woorabinda, Baralaba, Moura and Biloela to the north, Mundubbera and Gayndah to the east, Miles, Surat, Tara and Chinchilla to the south, and Injune and Roma to the west.”

Dr Stone said the new radar was one of 4 new radars being delivered for Queensland, with $77.2 million funding from the Australian Government. The existing radar in Moree (New South Wales) will also be relocated to provide increased coverage into southern Queensland.

Dr Stone said while radars are important tools, the Bureau’s forecast and weather warning service is resilient and not dependent on any one piece of equipment.

“This Taroom radar is one part of a comprehensive weather observation network of more than 11,000 assets including satellites, upper atmosphere monitoring, automatic weather stations, ocean buoys and flood warning networks,” he said.

“Forecasts and warnings for all regions are based on a combination of many of these different observing systems. More than 90% of data that feed into the Bureau’s weather models come from satellites. The network provides a comprehensive dataset that enables communities to effectively respond to weather events.”

The Taroom radar is part of the most significant upgrade of Australia’s radar and observation network in a generation. By June 2024, the Bureau of Meteorology will deliver eight new radars, plus upgrades to 46 radars, nearly 700 automatic weather stations and 200 flood warning network assets.

Keep up to date with the Bureau’s latest radar images, forecasts, and warnings on bom.gov.au and the BOM Weather App.

/Bureau of Meteorology Public Release. View in full .