The New Zealand Herald

More in store Miserable month

Every day but two in August on track to be a wet one for Aucklander­s

- Jamie Morton

It wouldn’t be news to anyone in rain-soaked Auckland that this month has been miserable. Now meteorolog­ists say the big drivers that gave winter a depressing third act also cooled seas which have been running warm since 2017.

August might also mean the end to a 30-month run of above-average temperatur­es — as well as a record tally of rainy days in the City of Sails.

Auckland is on track to see a total 29 rain days this month — breaking a record set only last month — and Saturday may bring August’s second clear day over the city.

Niwa figures showed, up until Sunday, Auckland had had 182mm of rain for the month — that’s 165 per cent of normal — while the mean daily temperatur­e had been running at a slightly above-average 12.1C.

Auckland’s rainy month has eclipsed that of other centres, such as Wellington (90mm so far), Christchur­ch (37mm), Hamilton (124mm) and Tauranga (124mm).

Fork in the road

Niwa meteorolog­ist Ben Noll likened New Zealand’s weather up to the start of the month as a smooth motorway.

July had clocked in as the second hottest on the books and came after a balmy six months that also brought one of the warmest starts to the year. “We were trucking along easily — but now we’re on a different road and it’s rocky.”

So what drove winter’s grim third act?

Noll explained that the Southern Ocean, usually hugely influentia­l in flavouring our winter weather, had been in a largely dormant state throughout the first half of the season.

“We weren’t seeing those cold air masses coming up and generating that instabilit­y which causes low pressure to form in the Tasman Sea, and moisture to then be dragged here to New Zealand.”

But that changed when meteorolog­ists began noticing how stronger activity in the jet stream — a band of fast-moving air sitting about 10km above us — was bolstering low-pressure systems as they approached the country. “That partly explained why we saw a lot of severe weather in various parts of the country over the month.”

At the same time, August’s stronger southweste­rly airflows saw sea-surface temperatur­es around the country plunge.

Noll noted that these sea temperatur­es had been sitting at above average for the past two-anda-half years — and the cool change had finally allowed colder masses from the south to reach us without being “muted” by the balmier waters before they got here.

“Now that they seem to have been taken out of the equation, these systems that track northward from the south were really able to show off their true colours.” The result: chilly, wintry weather. Another big indicator of August’s bleak turn was that the Southern Annular Mode, or Sam, had largely been stuck in a negative phase for most of the month. The Sam can generally be described as a ring of climate variabilit­y that encircles the South Pole, but stretches far out to NZ’s latitudes. First identified in the 1970s, it involves alternatin­g changes in windiness and storm activity between the middle latitudes, where New Zealand lies, and higher latitudes, over the southern oceans and Antarctic sea-ice zone.

In its positive phase, the Sam is associated with relatively light winds and more settled weather over New Zealand latitudes, together with enhanced westerly winds over the southern oceans.

It was a mainly positive Sam that had contribute­d toward our past two unusually balmy summers, as well as two marine heatwaves that dramatical­ly warmed up the oceans surroundin­g New Zealand.

But in the negative phase — as we’ve experience­d for weeks now — the westerlies increase over NZ, with more unsettled weather, while windiness and storm activity eased over the southern oceans.

It remained to be seen whether August’s colder weather would be enough to break a 30-month run of above-average temperatur­es.

It’s all come as meteorolog­ists are closely monitoring a rare polar phenomenon that may bring more freezing weather our way during the first part of spring.

What’s called a sudden stratosphe­ric warming event, or SSW, occurred when the temperatur­e of the stratosphe­re high above the South Pole climbed by more than 25C.

That could weaken the polar vortex — a swirling, freezing air mass that usually kept harsh, wintry conditions locked up tight around Antarctica — and send cold blasts in the form of “streamers” northward toward us.

Noll said if these effects interacted with those from a system expected from the north early next month, temperatur­es might dive dramatical­ly. “We would expect it to be felt most notably between September 7 and 14, with some cold snaps possible for most of the country — and potentiall­y some more snow as well.”

Between now and October, Niwa has forecast temperatur­es to be near average or above average for all regions.

A sudden stratosphe­ric warming event is still forecast to peak on Friday August 30 over Antarctica.

Effects take time to trickle down through the atmosphere, but particular­ly unsettled weather may unfold around NZ starting in the first or second week of September.

Rainfall was expected to near normal or above normal in the west of the North Island and north of the South Island, with near-normal rain forecast for all remaining regions.

In the shorter term, meanwhile, MetService has forecast more rain moving over the country across the next day, as another cold front moves up from the south.

Colder temperatur­es in the atmosphere are making for some snow — possibly down to 500m in places the far south.

Road snowfall warnings are in place for Milford Rd, Crown Range Rd and Lindis Pass.

 ?? Photos / ODT ??
Photos / ODT
 ??  ?? Mosgiel pair Samantha and Amie Cooper, aged 10 and 8 (inset), tackle the snow at Dunedin’s Flagstaff, while Sika (above) needs her winter coat in Mount Cargill in northern Dunedin.
Mosgiel pair Samantha and Amie Cooper, aged 10 and 8 (inset), tackle the snow at Dunedin’s Flagstaff, while Sika (above) needs her winter coat in Mount Cargill in northern Dunedin.

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