Hail as big as golf balls and ferocious winds of up to 117 kilometres per hour have torn through Canberra in a storm that had residents running for cover.
More than 1,000 homes lost power, with outages reported in Florey, Griffith, Deakin and Kambah, and dozens more suburbs across the territory.
Since midday, the ESA had received a record number of requests for assistance, more than 1,900, with ACT Ambulance Service attending to two people for minor injuries sustained during the storm.
That was more than double what the service had received in the preceding two years.
ESA Commissioner Georgeina Whelan said they had withdrawn personnel from the firegrounds just over the ACT border where bushfires have threatened the territory in recent weeks.
“Obviously we have been stood up for weeks now in response to the threat of bushfires to the west of the ACT,” Ms Whelan said.
“And based on the information we had received from the Bureau of Meteorology, both last night and this morning, we had withdrawn a number of our assets off the fireground and then we redirected a number of those assets along with our SES capability that we had pre-emptively stood up.
“We were responding to a number of the requests for assistance within a matter of minutes.”
Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume. Ms Whelan said the damage to the ACT had been “quite considerable”, with the areas most impacted including Belconnen, the city, the Australian National University and the inner south.
A specialist intelligence gathering helicopter was flying over Canberra in the storm’s aftermath conducting a damage assessment from the sky.
“A combination of aerial surveillance and our damage teams will be out there on the ground assessing and prioritising the tasks — it will take us some time to get to all of those particularly challenging jobs,” Ms Whelan said.
The Bureau of Meteorology had issued a warning for “damaging, locally destructive winds, large, possible giant hailstones and heavy rainfall” due to hit the ACT at about 12:30pm, and advised residents to move cars undercover and stay indoors.
The BOM later reported wind gusts of 116 kilometres per hour.
Hilary Wardhaugh, who was at the National Library of Australia when the hail started to fall, described it as an “unbelievable” sight.
“My friend and I were going to go outside and have our lunch and then we came out and saw it was raining and then the hail started,” she said.