 As Brisbane comes to grips with the flooding that has invaded so many of our suburbs, we are still on a very high alert in parts of regional Queensland. I mentioned this morning that we were keeping a very careful watch on Gundawindi. The latest hydrology modelling indicates that Gundawindi is heading for a record flood of at least 10.85 metres, but in fact is very possibly going to be higher. With a levy bank of 11 metres, we are now very concerned and watching very carefully. There is a point upstream from Gundawindi called Kildonan. We will be able at about 4 o'clock to get a reading at Kildonan that will indicate whether or not we believe we may have to start taking pre-emptive measures to secure the safety of people at the hospital, the aged care homes and potentially some evacuations. The road into Gundawindi is open, so if we are faced with this prospect, we at least have road access. If the Kildonan reading at 4 o'clock will indicate just how big this may be in Gundawindi, this is a town of 6,000 people, we will have a 6 hour window of opportunity before the waters make their way from Kildonan into Gundawindi later tonight. So we have a situation potentially developing in Gundawindi. As I said we have people furiously monitoring the water and trying to get an assessment. We already know it is going to be a record water level in Gundawindi. The question now is whether that record will go over the age of the levy bank and if that happens then we will, if we have any prospect and any belief that that will happen then at 4 o'clock we will make a decision on how we will secure the safety of the people in Gundawindi. The second issue that we are managing this afternoon is that in the Lockyer Valley due to serious damage to much of the water treatment infrastructure in the valley, we now have a number of reservoirs running very low on water. There are a number of reservoirs, I think four reservoirs that, sorry, there are a number of reservoirs that service the townships of the Lockyer Valley and they provide drinking water to about 10,000 people. As I said they are now running extremely low. A very large exercise began this afternoon where we have five Australian Defence Force water trucks out of Brisbane and six to eight from the Townsville Council around 6pm tonight will start making their way down into the valley. So some 13 water trucks will now start making runs of water to top up directly into those reservoirs and they will run 24 hours a day until such time as we have been able to repair sufficient infrastructure in the water treatment facilities that feed those reservoirs in the Lockyer Valley. There are many small townships in the Lockyer Valley but in total there are some 10,000 people. Water supply is now a critical issue. Can I reassure the people of that valley that there has been a massive logistical exercise pulled together this afternoon and water trucks from both to Woomba and Brisbane including those provided by the ADF are now making their way into the valley and they will continue to operate as I said 24 hours a day until we can fix the infrastructure that will get water treated and back into the reservoirs. In terms of electricity supply we have seen the customers who have cut off drop at the very highest point that we had 125,000 people cut off from electricity in the South East. The customers that are offline right now are 103,000. The aimed by 10 o'clock tonight is to reduce that to 70,000 and by tomorrow night at 10 p.m. to have less than 30,000. The rate of reconnection will then slow considerably after that. Those ones after 10 o'clock tomorrow night are the ones where we've got serious and prolonged inundation and they are in suburbs which we may not be able to reconnect for some time. So by 10 o'clock tomorrow night we hope to have reduced the number of people who have been without power as a result of this incident by close to 100,000. So most people in the next 24 hours should see their suburbs reconnected. For those who don't it means you're in a suburb and you'll know this already which has very serious inundation and it's going to be a long time before we've got all of those issues resolved. We have some reports also out of the Lockyer Valley in relation to the search and rescue teams. We have not found any further, we haven't identified any further deaths but I'll invite Deputy Commissioner to make some comments about that exercise. Premier thank you. Probably the one bit of good news we've had out of Lockyer today is that the clearances of the rail bridge at Grantham has been now completed. All of the vehicles have been removed and we've had police divers check the remaining waterhole under the bridge. I'm happy to say that no further deceased persons were located as a result of this search so that is very very good news at this time. Obviously the search and rescue efforts do continue and if there's one thing I could ask you to do to pass on to the community if you have reported a friend or relative missing and you have identified that that person is safe somewhere would you please kindly ring the same authority that you registered that person with as a missing person and advise them of that fact. We are using enormous resources trying to track down people who are registered on those lists. Thank you. Are there any questions? On the situation in Grantham at the moment do you have any information, any new information? That was Grantham. Apart from the situation with the bridge? Premier, if I may look certainly the search and rescue aspect is occurring right across that whole valley area. We have large numbers of police, SES and ADF personnel now in that area right now continuing to search. It has to be a methodical search that is undertaken of all of the farmhouses of all of the creek banks that exist right through that whole locker system. This is going to take some time. Obviously we're prioritising and the Grantham bridge, the rail bridge and the area underneath that was a priority because of the reports that we had about the number of vehicles and potentially people caught in those vehicles. That's why I said I'm very happy to report that we've had no deceased persons located in that area. Thank you very much. Any prognosis about the developing offshore weather? This is in the Coral Sea. I'm happy to answer that. Certainly we've had a weather report on that this afternoon. They have told us that there is actually a tropical cyclone and a tropical low in the Coral Sea area but there is a number of days before that would impact on our coastline other than gale warnings and the north and then ultimately in the south of the state. I can only report that it's a male person and he was found in a motor vehicle. Thank you. Thank you very much.