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Wild spring storm brings huge hail to parts of Australia's eastern coast

As a powerful springstorm swept across Australia's east coast, giant hailstones rained down on Queensland and more than 95,000 houses were left without electricity.

The Bureau of Meteorology in Australia reported hail as big as 14 cm (5 inches), damaging solar panels, roofs, and cars.

Energex, an energy distributor, said that the wild weather produced wind gusts up to 100 km/h (62mph) and over 800,000 lighting strikes. These caused power lines to be downed and cut off electricity for 95,000 customers.

The weather bureau has forecast more severe storms for Tuesday in south-east Queensland, north-east New South Wales and the surrounding areas as the high humidity and hot temperatures persist.

Miriam Bradbury, Senior Meteorologist at ABC, told the national broadcaster that severe storms were still expected across most of the South-east today.

We're seeing today a similar setup to yesterday.

Bradbury said that the weather will not be as "intense" as it was on Tuesday. This means the risk of "giant hail is slightly reduced in comparison to yesterday".

The Bureau of Meteorology also issued a heatwave alert for the northern parts of Queensland. Maximum temperatures are expected to exceed 40 degrees Celsius.

Queenslanders shared images of huge hailstones on social media.

One Reddit user posted a photo of a large hailstone that measured 10 cm in diameter and weighed 188.8 g (6.66 ounces). Reporting by Christine Chen, Sydney; Editing and proofreading by SonaliPaul)

(source: Reuters)