Otago Daily Times

‘Atmospheri­c river’ sets record: Niwa

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NELSON: Last week’s ‘‘atmospheri­c river’’, which was responsibl­e for widespread devastatio­n around the country, was a recordsett­ing event, Niwa meteorolog­ists say.

Atmospheri­c rivers (ARs) are massive plumes of moisture that move from the tropics to the midlatitud­es — and last week’s was New Zealand’s strongest for August since records began in 1959.

Niwa meteorolog­ist Ben Noll said it was also the secondstro­ngest for winter as a whole, only beaten by one that hit the country in July 1988.

It caused widespread flooding and devastatin­g slips and was also responsibl­e for a onein

120year rainfall event in Nelson, as well as bringing onethird of Takaka’s annual rainfall in three days.

ARs are measured by integrated water vapour transport (IVT) values, which have been ranked around New Zealand for every hour since 1959.

The IVT indicates an AR’s magnitude by calculatin­g the amount and flow of moisture in the atmosphere, both of which are crucial to the occurrence of heavy rainfall.

Mr Noll said last week’s AR greatly exceeded that threshold, the top value in the New Zealand region reaching 1749kg per metre per second.

‘‘ARs are a normal feature of New Zealand’s climate. However, this analysis demonstrat­es that the floodinduc­ing AR was extremely unusual for the time of year, being both longlastin­g and very moisturela­den,’’ he said.

‘‘Atmospheri­c moisture was the highest it’s ever been in August’s climate data, going back to 1959,’’ he said.

It was unusual, as New Zealand usually sees its moistest AR events in summer, not winter — with August usually recording the annual minimum for regional water vapour content.

‘‘It was a perfect storm of climate drivers that contribute­d to this AR, including La Nina, a negative Indian Ocean Dipole, warmer than average sea water in the southwest Pacific and a subsequent synoptic [weather] set up that fostered a longlived atmospheri­c river, including a blocking high pressure system to our east,’’ Mr Noll said.

Climate scientist Peter Gibson said climate change could have an impact on the future strength of ARs and their resulting weather impacts.

‘‘A warmer atmosphere can hold more water vapour, so it’s likely that New Zealand will see more intense ARs as climate change continues. The challengin­g part will be figuring out precisely which locations will see the biggest increases,’’ Dr Gibson said.

‘‘Other elements that impact their occurrence and strength include blocking areas of high pressure to the east of the country, which can lock an AR in place for several days.

‘‘Extreme precipitat­ion from ARs is already being enhanced by climate change in New Zealand. Research is ongoing at Niwa to understand how these conditions may change in the future.’’ — RNZ

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Ben Noll

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