- A weather forecaster is predicting a 鈥渃ool lean鈥 for much of New Zealand over the first half of January, amid chilly southerly and south-westerly flows
- Wellington is forecast to reach just 14C on Sunday 鈥 with 90km/h gusts possible in exposed places 鈥 although Aucklanders will get highs in the early 20s for most of next week
- A La Nina climate driver that鈥檇 been tipped to deliver warm, wet and muggy conditions to the north-east over late summer now looks increasingly unlikely to form
Where鈥檚 summer gone?
That鈥檚 a question many beachgoers around New Zealand might be asking themselves right now, after a country-wide shift to cooler, wetter weather over recent days.
And it鈥檚 a pattern that Niwa forecaster Chris Brandolino expects to see continue for the first half of January.
鈥淔or much of the country, but not all, we鈥檙e expecting a cool lean 鈥 and that theme will probably persist for another week to 10 days,鈥 Niwa forecaster Chris Brandolino said.
Some places would be particularly feeling those markedly un-summer-like conditions.
Brandolino singled out Wellington, which was experiencing a run of rainy days with highs reaching only the mid-teens 鈥 and winds forecast to gust at 90km/h in exposed places on Sunday.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 absolutely atrocious weather for January... that鈥檚 laughable.鈥
Other spots in for a milder end to the weekend include Christchurch, with a forecast high of just 16C on Sunday, along with Dunedin (15C), Taup艒 (16C) and Gisborne (17C).
On Monday, MetService is forecasting rain in the south and east of the North Island 鈥 possibly heavy at times 鈥 before easing later in the day, with fine spells and isolated showers elsewhere.
The South Island will see cloudy periods and a few showers in northern and eastern areas, while most other regions remain dry.
Tuesday is forecast to bring clearing showers to the North Island鈥檚 east with fine spells across much of the island, but in the South Island, rain is forecast to spread north, with some areas likely to experience heavy falls.
Northern centres including Auckland, Tauranga and Hamilton were likely to see temperatures nudging toward the mid-20s throughout next week 鈥 but broadly, there鈥檇 still be a difference from December鈥檚 鈥渆xceptionally warm鈥 weather, Brandolino said.
Most places in the country saw well-above-average temperatures over the first third of summer, he said, 鈥渁nd people seem to forget that鈥.
鈥淣ow people are out on holiday, they鈥檙e exposed to the elements and they鈥檙e asking, what鈥檚 going on?鈥
The main culprit was dominant southerly and south-westerly flows from below New Zealand.
Those winds had also helped churn up the sea surface around New Zealand鈥檚 coasts 鈥 and dissipating that were driving up air temperatures just a few weeks ago.
鈥淎t any rate, the west of the South Island may be one place, certainly over the next couple of weeks, where it鈥檚 good for holiday-makers 鈥 that means not a lot of rain and temperatures that are pleasantly warm, particularly for that part of the world.鈥
For all of New Zealand, he said a spell of more typical summer weather was possible for mid-January.
鈥淲e may start to see at least a brief reprieve, even if only for a couple of days, of settled, dry, warm weather for much of the country.鈥
Amid the picture, Brandolino said there were also signs of expanding dryness across the upper North Island, which could 鈥渋ntensify鈥 over the rest of summer.
But at the same time, a wetter shift from months of dry and relentless westerly winds in Hawke鈥檚 Bay had begun to alleviate drought conditions there.
Further in the background, the long-anticipated arrival of a La Nina climate pattern 鈥 to bring warm, wet and muggy conditions to the north-east over late summer 鈥 now looked increasingly unlikely.
鈥淚鈥檓 doubtful that we鈥檒l see any sustained La Nina-like weather patterns in the coming weeks and months,鈥 he said, citing unusual warmth in the waters off South America as a potential factor disrupting the big driver鈥檚 formation.
鈥淲e may see flashes of it. We may see periods of it. But, for that key word sustained, I think the window is shutting.鈥
Australia鈥檚 Bureau of Meteorology similarly reports sea surface temperatures in the central tropical Pacific will remain in the current 鈥淓NSO-neutral鈥 range through to April, despite dropping close to the La Nina threshold this month.
Niwa is set to release its climate outlook for the first three months of 2025 next week.
Jamie Morton is a specialist in science and environmental reporting. He joined the Herald in 2011 and writes about everything from conservation and climate change to natural hazards and new technology.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE