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On Sunday morning, it was at 15m and rising. With more heavy rain forecast for the next 24 hours, the Herbert River is likely to break the 1967 record of 15.2m later on Sunday.
The atmospheric factors behind these floods are very similar to recent floods in the region — and climate change is no doubt playing a role.

The flood level for the Herbert River at Ingham set in 1967 was 15.2 metres. Source: The Conversation
Where are the floods hitting?
Further north in the Cairns to Daintree region, residents are watching with concern, with many still raw after the record-breaking floods of December 2023.
What’s behind these floods?
What triggered each of these floods was prolonged heavy rain falling on the southeast flank of a stationary tropical low weather system.

More extreme rainfall and higher frequencies of flooded rivers and flash floods around the world have a clear link to climate change and ongoing global heating.
Hotter oceans hold more energy, meaning they can also amplify the global water cycle when atmospheric conditions are suitable.
This year’s latest-ever monsoon
When it arrives, sea surface temperatures generally drop due to a combination of high cloud cover and the cooling effect of rainwater.
The Bureau of Meteorology is monitoring an active monsoon trough for any low-pressure systems, which may develop into tropical cyclones over the next week or so. If any cyclone does form, it will gain energy from warmer-than-usual sea surface temperatures.