Having
had a sourjourn in hospital yesterday I missed out on blogging the
yesterday. Fortunately, this cyclone which was supposed to be the
worstsince 1967 tracked further east so that damage was not as great
as originally thought.
Powerful
Storms in a Warming World — Cook is Strongest Cyclone to Strike New
Zealand in Nearly 50 Years
14
April, 2017
About
12 hours ago, at 18:30 local time (06:30 GMT) on Thursday, Cyclone
Cook roared out of an ocean that has now been considerably warmed by
human-forced climate change to made landfall in the Bay of Plenty
region of New Zealand. Packing
wind gusts of up 90 miles per hour and lashing the region with 1/2 to
1 inch per hour rainfall rates,
the storm is the most powerful cyclone to strike New Zealand since
1968.
Most
Powerful New Zealand Cyclone in Nearly 50 Years
The
storm raked a region that
had already seen saturating, long-lasting, rainfall from the remnants
of Cyclone Debbie just one week before.
As a result, trees unable to gain purchase in the weakened soils
uprooted en-masse. Power was knocked out in Whakatane and in
numerous other locations along Cook’s path — cutting off at least
11,000 residences. Locals described
gusts like freight trains as
hundreds huddled in evacuation shelters. Flights
out of Rotorua, Tauranga, Napier and Hamilton in the North Island,
and Nelson and Blenheim in the South Island were all canceled.
The
30 foot swells and
a resulting storm surge in the Bay
of Plenty region
were expected to result in serious coastal flooding and damage to
shore-front structures. But the chief worry from the system, after
Debbie’s devastating rains, was more precipitation-related
flooding.
(GFS
7 day rainfall forecast for New Zealand shows considerably above
average precipitation from Cook. See also GFS
rainfall model runs.)
GFS
model runs indicated the potential for 4-8 inches of rainfall or more
near New Zealand population centers along the path of Cyclone Cook.
And for many regions, these totals equal about 1-2 months worth of
rainfall at this time of year. Last week, 7.5 inches of rainfall over
just two days resulted in a levee breach at Edgecumbe on North Island
— flooding
the entire town and forcing nearly all the residents to evacuate.
And there is some concern that Cook’s follow-on to Debbie will
produce similar trouble.
Warming
Ocean Waters and High Amplitude Waves in the Jet Stream Feed Storm
Pattern
Cook
is interacting with a trough to the west of New Zealand in a manner
that is broadening the storm — spreading its wind field and
rainfall over a larger region than a purely tropical system would
typically impact. The trough had dipped down from the Southern Ocean
through an extended Jet Stream wave before it became cut-off and
linked up with Cook.
(Cook
is presently centered between New Zealand’s North and South Islands
[roughly under the green circle]. The swirl of clouds and wind to the
west of Cook is a second low pressure system that was cut off from a
trough sweeping south and west of New Zealand on Tuesday and
Wednesday. Cook is interacting with this trough in a manner than is
broadening its wind field and enhancing rainfall potentials. Image
source: Earth
Nullschool.)
The
far northward extent of this trough is indicative of higher amplitude
Jet Stream waves that have been associated with warming temperatures
at the polar regions due to climate change. And the zone south of New
Zealand over Antarctica has featured a strong dipole — with well
above normal temperatures facing off against a wall of cold air. This
dipole has facilitated troughs and facing ridges that extended well
into the middle latitudes.
(Cyclone
Cook fed on far warmer than normal waters which enabled it maintain
intensity as it moved into higher latitudes. Interaction with a
trough remnant left over from a high amplitude wave in the Jet Stream
also contributed to this extreme weather event. Image source: Earth
Nullschool.)
Meanwhile,
Cyclone Cook itself fed on 1-2 C warmer than normal sea surface
temperatures surrounding New Zealand. These warmer than normal waters
allowed Cook to retain strength and to interact with the polar
originating trough in a manner that arguably intensified and
broadened the scope of this severe weather event.
Links:
Hat
tip to LeslieGraham (please stay safe!)
Hat
tip to ili
Cyclone
Cook remnants miss Auckland as storm moves south along east New
Zealand coast
Hundreds
of people in New Zealand have been evacuated from some coastal areas
as the second major storm in just over a week made landfall near the
North Island town of Whakatane.
Key
points:
Severe
weather warnings are lifted as authorities assess damage
Thousands
are without power, and flights remain cancelled
The
storm is continuing to move south to the east of New Zealand
Weather
authorities had said the country was potentially facing the worst
storm since 1968, but residents of the nation's largest city
Auckland, breathed a sigh of relief as the remnants of Cyclone Cook
moved past them to the east.
Authorities
had feared the storm could hit the city and cause major problems.
"It
seems Auckland has largely survived ... unscathed," Auckland
Mayor Phil Goff tweeted.
A
state of emergency for the Bay of Plenty and the Thames-Coromandel
district was lifted early Friday morning.
But
roads were blocked by fallen trees and landslides, and about
thousands of homes in the eastern Bay of Plenty had lost power.
Civil
defence authorities said people from about 250 homes in the beach
town of Ohope were told they had to evacuate, while other households
chose to leave.
Air
New Zealand suspended flights from Tauranga Airport and other flights
around the country were also delayed or cancelled.
The
storm also caused power disruptions to hundreds of homes in Whakatane
and Tauranga.
The
military said it had placed 500 troops on standby to assist those
affected, if required.
The
storm moved south overnight on Thursday and was expected near the
capital, Wellington, early Friday, causing more problems along the
way but also losing some of its punch.
arlier
this week Cyclone Cook swept through Vanuatu and New
Caledonia, where it killed
one person.
New
Zealand's meteorological service had issued severe weather warnings
for the upper North Island and warned of landslides, flooding and
wind damage from gusts of up to 150 kilometres per hour — all
severe weather warnings were reportedly lifted by Friday morning,
according to local media.
Disaster
authorities asked people to avoid hardest-hit towns and reconsider
their travels over the four-day Easter weekend.
Weather
expert Chris Brandolino told Radio New Zealand more than 100
millimetres of rain could fall over Thursday and Friday.
The
tail-end of another powerful cyclone, Debbie,
had already slammed the country last week,
wreaking havoc and leaving the town of Edgecumbe flooded by
thigh-high water with many people still unable to return to their
homes.
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