Auckland’s Mayor Wayne Brown is requesting a top-level briefing from key emergency management staff ahead of the region being inundated by a tropically-fuelled storm.
One forecaster predicts at least one month’s worth of rain - possibly more - could fall between Sunday to next Friday with up to 200mm predicted for parts of the top half of the North Island and the South Island’s West Coast.
Brown, who apologised for “dropping the ball” in his public communication the night of January 27, has today sought expert advice in advance of the storm hitting.
“The mayor has requested a briefing from emergency management staff. At this stage we have no further information,” said a spokesperson.
The MetService is forecasting heavy rain and strong winds from Sunday morning through to Monday afternoon. There are no severe weather warnings yet. But this could change at short notice. So please be mindful and take care. We’ll be monitoring the situation closely.
Meanwhile, Brown today said Auckland Emergency Management staff have presented a detailed work programme for implementing the recommendations of the Bush review into the January 27 floods.
There was a strong focus on improving operational and governance relationships and a key recommendation to complete a review of a group plan with urgency would see a draft of the plan coming to the civil defence and emergency committee for consultation in July, he said.
The rain is forecast to start falling on Saturday evening across Northland before the system moves to Auckland, Coromandel and Bay of Plenty on Sunday.
Auckland will get eight days of wet weather from Sunday, the first few days with heavy downpours and gales forecast.
Heavy rain and easterly gales for Upper North Island during Sun and Mon, and large waves for northern coastlines
The first weather alerts were issued by MetService this morning.
A 42-hour heavy rain watch is in place for Northland from 9pm tomorrow, and Auckland’s rain is set to start before dawn on Sunday.
A strong wind watch has also been issued for Auckland and Northland across the weekend through to Monday afternoon.
The wind is expected to whip up wild seas with waves up to 6m crashing against the upper North Island eastern coastline on Monday night.
👀An atmospheric 'omega block' is starting to look likely from late this weekend. Resulting in a gridlock as upper lows trap a high east of NZ. This will allow a convergence zone to develop over the upper North. A recipe for prolonged heavy rain periods next week. pic.twitter.com/uw5r7Oy3Ae
MetService forecaster Jessie Owen said the sub-tropical low-pressure system packed with strong winds and rain was bearing down on New Zealand dragging a lot of warm wet air with it.
“It’s going to bring rain to the most northern parts of the North Island such as Northland late on Saturday and then spread south throughout the weekend.”
Owen said some of the rain would be heavy. It would also be partnered with strong northeasterly winds that would whip up wild seas.
Weatherwatch.co.nz this morning warned the gales had potential to be damaging, gusting up to 90km/h in exposed parts.
Owen said next week the low would keep tracking south dragging the rain across most of the country, unleashing the worst weather on northern and western regions.
“After that low moves to the south [and] we’re into a general wet disturbed northerly flow.
“We’re looking at several bands of rain coming in from the north. It’s all looking a bit messy and not particularly well defined but wet.”
Auckland, Northland, Coromandel and the Bay of Plenty were expected to fare the worst.
“We don’t have any warnings out just yet but we probably will within the next day or so,” she said.
The same regions would also be at risk of strong winds and big swells.
Still a long way out so not to be taken seriously yet but several weather models (Euro, UK, Oz, Ca) are projecting a significant rainfall week in parts of the upper North next week. The Oz model infamously projected Auckland's 27th Jan floods, 72 hrs out. It's getting wild again pic.twitter.com/4XBe5CfgeZ
“Since the low originates from the subtropics, it will drag warm, moist subtropical air over New Zealand, raising overnight temperatures into the teens for most of the North Island.”
Weatherwatch said the high levels of moisture and warmth from the tropics could produce thunderstorms. The main risk would be from Wednesday to Friday next week.