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Here come the windy westerlies: how El Niño is adding to spring’s bluster

Author
Jamie Morton,
Publish Date
Wed, 13 Sep 2023, 2:21PM

Here come the windy westerlies: how El Niño is adding to spring’s bluster

Author
Jamie Morton,
Publish Date
Wed, 13 Sep 2023, 2:21PM

New Zealand is in for a windy time over coming days and weeks ā€“ and this year, it wonā€™t just be the blustery arrival of spring to blame for persistent westerlies.

A forecaster says the annual spring equinox is coming in tandem withĀ an El NiƱo climate patternĀ that could be formally declared within weeks, and which is already driving itsĀ signature westerly flowsĀ on to New Zealand.

WeatherWatchā€™s Philip Duncan said there was potential for strong westerly quarter winds over the country towards the end of the week, when gale or severe gale northwesterlies are expected about the eastern South Island and lower eastern North Island.

Duncan said those winds could strengthen over the weekend as another series of fronts arrived, making for especially choppy conditions at sea.

Ā ā€œThe pattern weā€™ll be seeing will be kind of off-and-on for the next couple of weeks, with a surge at the end of this week, followed by a bigger one around Sunday,ā€ he said.

ā€œI think we can expect severe weather warnings from MetService, and power lines and a few trees down in some parts across the country at times over the coming week or two.ā€

MetServiceĀ has so far issued severe weather warningsĀ and watches for Thursday and Friday, with a moderate risk of severe gale northwesterlies about Marlborough, Wellington, Wairarapa, Tararua and Central Hawkeā€™s Bay on Friday morning.

ā€œIn the east of the main divide, anyone south of Napier is under a strong wind watch or warning during tomorrow,ā€ MetService meteorologist Andrew James said.

The agency currently had ā€œmoderateā€ confidence of another period of severe northwest gales about northern Marlborough, Wellington, Wairarapa, Tararua and Central Hawkeā€™s Bay on Sunday and Monday morning.

There was low confidence of these winds reaching gale-strength in exposed parts of southern Marlborough, Canterbury, Otago, Southland and southern Fiordland later Saturday and into Sunday or early Monday.

That was also the case for potential severe gale west or southwest winds about southern Fiordland, Southland and Otago later Sunday and early Monday ā€“ and for other North Island areas from southern Northland to Hastings District and Kapiti, and near Golden Bay.

Duncan didnā€™t view these westerly surges as extreme events, ā€œas theyā€™ll be so fast-moving that theyā€™re gone as quickly as they move in each dayā€.

But, he added, theyā€™d mark a noticeable change from the set-up Kiwis have seen under the last three years of La NiƱa.

ā€œI think thereā€™s been a lack of wind in spring, at least for the top of the country. Last year, we had a lot more low pressure that helped remove a lot of the windy westerlies,ā€ he said.

ā€œThis year has more of a classic setup ā€“ but I think the El NiƱo component to it could keep it going for longer.ā€

Each year following the Spring Equinox ā€“ landing this month on September 23 ā€“ we notice the days grow longer, while extra warmth reaches the Southern Ocean.

This helps to activate the generally westerly quarter winds found there, and typically causes them to expand on to New Zealand, producing fronts and squally winds.

This period of ā€œequinoctial galesā€ normally reaches its peak in October and November.

At the same time, the typical pressure set-up of El NiƱo - placing high pressure to the north of New Zealand and low pressure to the south ā€“ acts likes two cogs of a wheel that drives westerly flows onto the country.

For places like the West Coast of the South Island, that can mean frequent fronts and rain bands.

ā€œPlaces like New Plymouth or Auckland can also end up getting weather thatā€™s cloudier and windier over summer, with average temperatures,ā€ Duncan said.

But, given the air parcels within these winds dry out as they move from west to east, long periods of warmth and little rain can become the theme for regions like Canterbury, eastern Marlborough, Hawkeā€™s Bay and Gisborne.

Niwa anticipates a declaration of El NiƱo may come later this month, and there are early signs this systemĀ may be one of the strongest seen in decades.

Duncan said the modelling WeatherWatch used painted a picture of unsettled conditions over much of the country in spring, but with a drying trend on the East Coast.

ā€œBut as we go into summer, this dryness may become far more widespread across the North Island and the upper south, in places like Nelson, Marlborough and Canterbury,ā€ he said.

ā€œWeā€™ve been talking about El NiƱo all year, and weā€™ve basically got this weather pattern now ā€“ but it gets more set-in during summer, and it could be winter before it goes away.ā€

Jamie Morton is a specialist in science and environmental reporting. He joined theĀ HeraldĀ reporting team in 2011 and has spent the last decade writing about everything from conservation and cosmology to climate change and Covid-19.

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