Dangerous swell to hit Australia's east coast forcing beach closures

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More dangerous and hazardous surf conditions will hit the coast of Queensland and New South Wales today.

The Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) said the coastline from the NSW Central Coast to Queensland's Sunshine Coast has been hit by "abnormally high tides".

"Places like Byron Bay have seen average waves of five metres," meteorologist Agata Imielska said.

"The highest wave we saw in Byron Bay was 10 metres."

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Massive swells and dangerous winds to hit the eastern coast over next two days.

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Bribie Island king tide split Queensland

NSW Police Superintendent Murray Reynolds said the dangerous surf conditions have caused an increased risk of water tragedies.

"Just in the last week we've seen a number of tragic incidents that have resulted in the death of people in and around or waterways," he said.

"One of the most difficult aspects of policing is investigating fatalities and understanding the outcome was entirely preventable."

It comes as another drowning occurred in NSW yesterday, with police locating the body of a 38-year-old man at a lake in Mt Annan.

Marine Rescue NSW has carried out 560 rescues in December which is an increase of more than 29 per cent compared to December 2020.

Authorities have urged holiday goers to implement water safety such as wearing a life jacket, not entering the water if you can't swim, and swimming between the flags at beaches.

Superintendent Reynolds said the number of water-related tragedies could have been prevented.

The massive swells and dangerous winds have forced the closure of multiple beaches along the Gold Coast and Coffs Coast in NSW.

George Shales, Surf Life Saving NSW, said the "large swell conditions and high tides is making it extremely dangerous".

"In terms of beaches today we've got 146 beaches that should be open, 80 per cent are closed today," he said.

A 47-year-old woman died in rough seas at Park Beach in Coffs Harbour yesterday afternoon.

A wave of nine metres was recorded off the Tweed Heads and the powerful king tide was seen pulling a shipping container full of kegs of beer along a Gold Coast beach.

READ MORE: Queensland island split in two by cyclone swells

Queensland king tides sweep shipping container, several kegs of beer across Gold Coast beach

Bribie Island, off the coast of Brisbane, was split in two by a powerful torrent.

Ex-tropical cyclone Seth has caused dangerous surf conditions, the BoM said.

The hazardous surf conditions are expected to peak on Wednesday morning and then ease.

However as the dangerous surf eases, NSW will see the return of thunderstorm risks, Ms Imielska said.

"The thunderstorm risk will be of particular concern for the southern part of the state from Wednesday into Friday," she said.

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The three-day heatwave is expected to last Tuesday, Wednesday and into Thursday.

Much of the country will also be hit with sweltering temperatures today as a three-day heatwave hammers multiple states.

The Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) said "areas of severe heatwave conditions are forecast to cover the west of Queensland, the south and centre east of the Northern Territory, and a small area is forecast near Giles in Western Australia".

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Western Australia is forecast to reach 49C later in the week.

Currently Seth is sitting about 250-kilometres south east of Brisbane but the system is weakening.

Source: 9News