Category 5 cyclone nears Western Australia coast
This frame grab taken from video footage provided by Australian Broadcast Corporation (ABC) on February 13, 2025 via AFPTV shows a boat moving past wharfs that are part of mining operations at Port Hedland, ahead of the arrival of category five Cyclone Zelia. Forecasters said the slow-moving, severe tropical cyclone was moving south on February 13 morning towards Port Hedland — one of the world’s busiest iron ore loading ports — with landfall expected in the afternoon. (Photo by Handout / ABC / AFP)
SYDNEY, Australia — Category five Cyclone Zelia swirled towards Australia’s minerals-rich western coast Friday, with predicted gusts of up to 290 kilometers per hour sparking emergency warnings and port closures.
Forecasters said the slow-moving, severe tropical cyclone was moving south on Friday morning towards Port Hedland — one of the world’s busiest iron ore loading ports — with landfall expected in the afternoon.
“Very destructive winds of up to 290 kilometers per hour (180 miles per hour) are likely close to the center of the cyclone as it crosses the coast,” the Australian Bureau of Meteorology said.
It warned residents of a possible dangerous storm tide as the cyclone made landfall.
“Tides are likely to rise significantly above the normal high tide mark with damaging waves and dangerous flooding of some low-lying areas close to the shoreline,” it said in an update.
The cyclone was forecast to land near Port Hedland — about 17 hours’ drive north of the state capital Perth — before tracking inland across sparsely populated mining and cattle country.
Initially arriving as a category five cyclone, Zelia was expected to weaken to a category four later in the evening.
Pilbara Ports said it had cleared vessels and shut down operations at major minerals export centers Port Hedland and Port Dampier as well as the oil and gas shipping port of Varanus Island.
Emergency services in Western Australia told people still in the cyclone’s path to shelter in the strongest part of their homes, warning it was now too late to attempt to leave.
The northwest coast of Western Australia is the most cyclone-prone region in the country, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.
It also has “the highest incidence of cyclones in the southern hemisphere.”
The region holds significant deposits of iron ore, copper and gold, and is home to some of Australia’s largest mining operations.
Mining group Rio Tinto said its ships and trains had been cleared from ports in the area.
“It is too early to say how long port and rail operations will be closed and what the impact will be,” it said in a statement Thursday.