Australia Weather News

Stormy weather brought lightning to Perth on Thursday morning. (ABC News: Andrew O'Connor — file photo)
Two teenage girls and a man in his 70s have been injured after suspected lightning strikes in Perth.
The man was rushed to Fiona Stanley Hospital by paramedics who were called to the north Perth suburb of Hamersley just after 8.30am in response to reports that he had been struck by lightning.
He is understood to be in a serious but non-life-threatening condition.
Paramedics were then called to a school in Mount Helena in Perth's east around 10.10am to treat two teenage girls following another reported lightning strike.
Both girls are understood to be in non-life-threatening conditions, with one of them being transferred to Fiona Stanley Hospital.
It’s estimated about 100 people in Australia are struck by lightning each year, and between five to ten people die from their injuries.
The Bureau of Meterology had forecast a slight chance of a shower and a chance of a thunderstorm in the morning and afternoon.
The Department of Fire and Emergency Services also confirmed a house fire in Nollamara this morning was caused by a lightning strike.
Nobody was home at the time.
The cause of a separate house fire nearby in Balcatta around the same time is still being determined.
A scrub fire in Emma Treeby Reserve in Banjup was also caused by lightning.
Trains disrupted
The lightning forced the closure of several train lines across Perth, creating havoc for people on their morning commute.
In a statement, the Public Transport Authority said lightning strikes affected network signalling on the Mandurah, Yanchep and Thornlie-Cockburn lines.
"The issue has now been resolved and train services have resumed, although some delays are expected," the statement said.
ABC