Two ports in Western Australia's Pilbara region reopen after Tropical Cyclone Zelia


SYDNEY (Reuters) -Western Australia's ports of Dampier and Varanus Island reopened, the ports' operator said, after Tropical Cyclone Zelia hit the state's Pilbara iron ore region on Friday.

Pilbara Ports said on its website late on Friday that the ports, a gathering and processing hub for oil and gas, reopened after being shut on Thursday evening as Zelia, the most severe storm to hit the Pilbara coast since Cyclone Ilsa in April 2023, approached.

"Pilbara Ports has undertaken inspections of navigation aids, channels and berths and has confirmed safe operations can resume," the operator said in the alert.

Zelia brought heavy rain and wind gusts up to 290 kph (180 mph) when it made landfall. Its approach prompted the closure of the world's largest iron ore hub, Port Hedland, on Wednesday. The region's Cape Lambert port also shut.

Pilbara Ports did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether Port Hedland remained closed on Saturday, after Zelia crossed the coast near the port around noon (0400 GMT) on Friday as a category five cyclone, the highest danger rating.

It moved south and weakened to a category four, sparing the town's population centre from its most destructive winds.

The nation's weather forecaster said on Saturday that Zelia, now downgraded to a tropical low, was "dissipating over the inland Pilbara".

"Ex-Tropical Cyclone Zelia is below cyclone intensity and is continuing to weaken as it moves slowly south and further inland through the eastern Pilbara," the forecaster said on its website.

Even so, senior forecaster meteorologist Angus Hines told the Australian Broadcasting Corp that some Pilbara towns could become cut off as water levels rose due to heavy rain brought by the storm.

An emergency warning was in place on Saturday for residents between the remote Pilbara towns of Warralong to Marble Bar, about 157 km (97 miles) southeast of Port Hedland, Western Australia's Department of Fire and Emergency Services said.

Port Hedland is used by BHP Group, Fortescue and billionaire Gina Rinehart's Hancock Prospecting, while the Dampier and Cape Lambert ports ship iron ore from Rio Tinto, which expected ship movements to resume on Saturday afternoon.

Fortescue said on Saturday it was assessing its operational sites, including roads, villages and mines in the wake of the cyclone.

"Minimal damage has been reported," a spokesperson said in a statement, after the company on Friday closed its Iron Bridge mining operations and cancelled non-essential travel to Pilbara sites. "We are working to resume normal activities as quickly and safely as possible."

BHP did not immediately respond to request for comment on Saturday. On Friday it paused its Port Hedland operations for safety, instructing teams to shelter at home or at camp.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; Editing by Stephen Coates and William Mallard)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Legal team plans to meet with detained Myanmar ex-leader Suu Kyi this weekend
For War Powers Resolution purposes, US hostilities with Iran that began in February have 'terminated', official says
Riot erupts over Australian Indigenous girl's suspected killer, authorities urge calm
U.S. stocks close higher amid strong corporate earnings
US judge rejects Trump administration's halt on immigration applications
Canada's GDP up 0.2 pct in February
Apple reports record March-quarter revenue
Brazil’s Lula plans new nomination to Supreme Court after historic defeat, sources say
Ukrainian drone kills two teenagers in Russia's Belgorod region
California gas prices top 6 USD as national average hits four-year high

Others Also Read