Bay of Plenty Times

Forecast for month’s rain in 3 days

- Jamie Morton

An inbound “atmospheri­c river” may deliver parts of the South Island’s West Coast one to two times their monthly rainfall in the space of a few days — raising risks of flooding and slips.

Metservice has issued a raft of new weather alerts for the South Island, including an “orange” heavy rain warning for much of Westland for today to Thursday.

Over that period in the region, as much as 600mm to 800mm could accumulate about the ranges — with peak hourly rates of 20mm to 30mm — along with 200mm to 300mm about the coast.

The extreme downpours — also flagged by local Civil Defence groups on social media yesterday — may cause streams and rivers to rise rapidly, with surface flooding and slips possible, Metservice said in a statement.

“This is a significan­t heavy rain event with the potential for upgrade to a red warning.”

An orange warning was also in place for Fiordland, north of George Sound, where about 150mm to 250mm of rain could fall today, with peak rates reaching 20mm/h to 30mm/h.

Elsewhere, Metservice has issued a strong wind watch for Fiordland — where north-to-northwest winds were forecast to possibly hit gale strength overnight and today — and also for the Canterbury High Country, for 24 hours from noon today.

Heavy rain watches were in place for southern Fiordland, the headwaters of the Canterbury lakes, and in the Grey District and Westland north of Hokitika.

Niwa said the wild weather was the result of low pressure combining with an “atmospheri­c river” — long, snaking features that are well known to ferry huge volumes of subtropica­l moisture into regions like the West Coast.

Later in the week, the rain and wind was expected to spread north as the front moved up the country and a series of smaller lows developed.

Wellington and southern Wairarapa could see strong winds by tomorrow.

On Friday, it was possible rain could reach warning amounts in central areas of the North Island, from Taranaki to Bay of Plenty.

Niwa meteorolog­ist Ben Noll earlier said the event could prove critical for delivering much-needed rain to the South Island’s hydro lakes ahead of winter — but also for alleviatin­g dryness in places like droughthit Marlboroug­h.

“The risk, however, is that some of the dry, cracked ground in these regions simply won’t be able to take the level of rain that’s coming — and then you get surface flooding,” Noll said.

“So, we’re potentiall­y looking at one of New Zealand’s busiest weather weeks since the start of the year,” he said.

“It’s been a while since we’ve had a high-impact event like this covering so many regions.”

 ?? Image / Niwa ?? Parts of the South Island can expect one to two times their monthly rainfall in the space of a few days.
Image / Niwa Parts of the South Island can expect one to two times their monthly rainfall in the space of a few days.

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