Australia: Thousands of cattle feared lost in north west floods

Published 2023년 3월 22일

Tridge summary

Over 50,000 cattle have perished due to severe flooding in far north west Queensland, with the disaster causing significant structural damage and economic losses. The floodwaters have forced residents in two Gulf of Carpentaria areas to evacuate, and recovery efforts are ongoing with support from federal and state ministers. The Australian Government has activated income support mechanisms, and discussions are underway to enhance disaster resilience and safety measures. The region continues to experience rainfall, with some areas recording over 100 millimetres of rainfall per week, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Queensland flood damage goes much further than structural, with more than 50,000 cattle lost. (PR HANDOUT IMAGE PHOTO) An estimated 50,000 head of cattle have died in far north west Queensland as the cleanup from major flooding begins. Communities were left unable to return to their homes in two flooded areas of the Gulf of Carpentaria after late monsoon rains created a vast inland sea earlier this month. Federal and state ministers have since visited the Gulf and conducted damage assessments with the figure estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Katter's Australian Party MPs Bob and Robbie Katter joined Queensland Agriculture Minister Mark Furner, and federal Minister for Agriculture and Emergency Management Senator Murray Watt. Federal Income support mechanisms were rolled out under the Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment, with people eligible for up to 13 weeks of income support. But the damage goes much further than structural and livelihoods with ...

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