Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

Another Sydney region deluge as Warragamba Dam spills

Huge 24-hour rainfall totals have again been recorded in and around Sydney region, with over 200 mm of rain recorded at some spots to 9 am Friday.

The rain was heaviest in the Illawarra region just south of Sydney, with extremely heavy falls also recorded in the Southern Highlands, most of which lies in the catchment of Sydney’s largest water storage reservoir, Lake Burragorang, which is dammed by Warragamba Dam.

Warragamba Dam began spilling water at 4:20 am, its third spill for 2024.

Anytime that happens, there are always flooding fears for residents living in low-lying areas downstream, and a minor to moderate flood warning is in place for the Hawkesbury-Nepean River.

Moderate flooding is also occurring upstream of Warragamba Dam along the Upper Nepean River.

The Nepean River at Menangle Bridge is well over the moderate flood level of 9.20m and expected to peak near 11.00 metres at Menangle Bridge early on Friday afternoon.

This is the latest recent heavy rainfall event that has targeted parts of the NSW coast and ranges within close proximity to Sydney. Red dots on the map below show locations that received over 100 mm of rainfall to 9 am Friday.

Source: BoM.

If you zoom in on the Greater Sydney region, you can see where the heaviest rain fell. You can also see Lake Burragorang near the blue word “Warragamba” around the centre of the image.

Source: BoM.

The heaviest falls included:

  • 214 mm at Scarborough, a northern seaside suburb of Wollongong.
  • 204 mm at Port Kembla, in the south of Wollongong.
  • 151 mm at High Range (in the catchment area for Lake Burragorang/Warragamba Dam).
  • 131.2 mm at Kiama just south of Wollongong (its heaviest daily fall in two years and heaviest daily June total in eight years).
  • 126.8 mm at Moss Vale in the Southern Highlands (heaviest daily June total in eight years).

A severe weather warning for parts of the Illawarra and south Coast regions is in force, so please be careful out there and remember to keep checking the latest warnings on our warnings page.

Are you protecting your enterprise from increasingly volatile weather risk?

You can’t control the shifting climate, but you can gain precision insights to optimise your response.

DTN APAC, a DTN company, has been providing weather intelligence and innovative forecasting systems to Australian businesses since 1998.

We have intuitive solutions that serve industries from aviation, mining and energy right through to marine, and everything in between. Rest assured, if we don’t already have a product to address your business’ weather needs, we will work tirelessly to create one.

With our network of global partners, we provide trusted, industry-leading services that can mitigate weather risk, keep your valuable staff and assets safe, and ensure you are operating at peak efficiency.  For more information please contact us at apac.sales@dtn.com.

Latest news

Satisfy your weather obsession with these news headlines from around the nation, and the world.

Polar blast brings high energy demand to southeast Australia

A cold front sweeping over southeastern Australia is bringing an icy polar blast and chilly nights. The animation below shows the forecast temperatures at 850 hPa (approximately 1,500 metres up) easily dropping between –2°C to -4°C above the capital cities, which translates to near sea-level surface temperatures in the low-teens. Video: Forecast 850 hPa temperatures over […]

Australia’s highest wind energy generation ever

Wind power generation has reached record levels as a series of powerful cold fronts sweep over Australia’s southeast. Most of Australia’s wind farms are located in South Australia, Victoria and NSW where cold fronts frequently bring periods of high wind energy. Image: wind farm locations across southeastern Australia. A series of powerful cold fronts linked […]

Indonesia’s Lewotobi Laki-Laki volcano eruption disrupting aviation seen from space

Lewotobi Laki-Laki, on the island of Flores, Indonesia, erupted on the afternoon of Tuesday, June 17, sending a large plume of volcanic ash and gases into the atmosphere. Video: Volcanic Ash plume visible on satellite imagery on the morning of Wednesday, June 18, 2025. Lewotobi Laki-Laki and Perempuan The Lewotobi twin volcano is located on […]

How wind energy has changed Australia’s energy sector

An increasingly reliable and resilient Australian renewable energy network depends on varied and vast sources of energy and accurate and informative forecasting, to meet the increasing energy demand. The main criticism in the transition to renewable power supplies has come from the dependence on weather and climate to maintain a steady production to meet the […]