Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
AAP
AAP
National
Nick Wilson and Aaron Bunch

'Harrowing' night as cyclone devastates remote towns

Narelle battered the Pilbara and North West Cape with winds up to 250km/h. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)

Residents in the firing line of a destructive cyclone are grappling with the "devastating" aftermath of an overnight battering. 

Ex-Tropical Cyclone Narelle was downgraded to a tropical low on Saturday, but not before it lashed parts of Western Australia's coastline. 

The storm left a trail of destruction in parts of the Pilbara and North West Cape, including Exmouth, a holiday town 1250km north of Perth. 

"There's pretty much devastation everywhere you look," Exmouth resident Craig Kitson told AAP. 

"The town has fundamentally changed." 

Storm damage in Exmouth
Narelle left a trail of damage in Exmouth. (Violeta Jahnel Brosig/AAP PHOTOS)

The town's few thousand residents bore the brunt of the category four storm, as it brought winds in excess of 250km/h on Friday. 

Roofs were torn off buildings, power was lost, homes were flooded and about 50 people had to abandon a local evacuation centre when it sustained wind damage.

Though he lost a fence and spent the night under a leaking roof, Mr Kitson counts himself lucky. 

"It was definitely a harrowing night there for a lot of people" Mr Kitson said, adding some homes had been completely destroyed.

"Some people's lives have been drastically changed."

While authorities are still counting the losses, locals say the storm felt as bad as any in recent memory, Mr Kitson said. 

"There was a category five in 1999 that probably did more damage but that's just because the building code has changed," he said. 

"People reckon this one was worse because it was longer and we definitely caught the bad side of it."

Thousands of homes and businesses remained without power across Exmouth and Carnarvon on Saturday morning. 

Nearly 40 Pilbara residents had requested assistance from the SES by Saturday morning, including 29 in Exmouth, a spokesperson said. 

Storm damage in Exmouth
A year's worth of rain in a day accompanied extreme winds. (Violeta Jahnel Brosig/AAP PHOTOS)

Narelle tracked south to Coral Bay and made landfall on Friday evening just south of the tiny town before weakening to a category three system.

It was downgraded to a category two northeast of Kalbarri and Geraldton before becoming a tropical low on Saturday morning.

Overnight, gusts above 120km/h were recorded in parts of the Gascoyne, alongside rainfall totals of up to 100mm, increasing the risk of flash flooding and road closures.

It will continue to lose intensity as it moves inland but is still producing powerful wind gusts and heavy rainfall, the bureau said. 

A watch and act alert remains in place west of Onslow to Coral Bay, with advice level warnings covering much of the state. 

A flood watch is in place from Exmouth as far south as Perth's Swan River, with the system expected to pass east of the state's capital on Saturday afternoon. 

It is expected to continue moving southeast until crossing into the Southern Ocean on Saturday evening.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.