New Zealand / Weather

High winds and heavy rain as weather system moves south

10:44 am on 30 April 2023

A satellite image of rain moving across the upper North Island on 30 April, 2023. Photo: MetService

Northland has escaped any major problems from the weather so far, but Emergency Management is expecting further downpours this afternoon.

MetService said some heavy rainfall was recorded overnight in Northland as a belt of wet and windy weather moved across the upper North Island.

It said 10mm of rain was recorded in Kaikohe between 2am and 3am, and again between 4am and 5am.

Emergency Management spokesman Zac Woods said Northland was coping well.

"We've definitely seen some strong winds and rain throughout the night for the region. There was a few dotted power outages, but most of those have been resolved but largely no major incidents or anything, occured overnight," he said.

Northland and Coromandel are both under orange heavy rain warnings, with MetService warning the expected downpours could cause rivers and streams to rise rapidly and make driving conditions hazardous.

A heavy rain watch is also in place for Auckland and strong wind watches are in force for Northland, north Auckland, Great Barrier Island and Coromandel.

There is also a strong winds warning in place for the Auckland Harbour Bridge and Waka Kotahi is urging motorists to take care.

Auckland Emergency Management said no problems have been reported in the region so far from the forecasted bad weather.

A spokesperson said the agency was monitoring the situation with the weather still making its way down from Northland.

So far the only concern were the high winds.

Thames Coromandel District Council said people needed to heed the warnings that up to 200mm of rain could fall across the entire district, with gale force easterly winds reaching up to 100 kilometres an hour.

Civil Defence Controller Garry Towler said people should prepare and make plans in case there were slips, falling trees, flooding, road closures or power cuts - as the bad weather could last up to a week.

Vector said it had been monitoring the electricity network overnight, as heavy rain and high winds began sweeping into Auckland in the early hours.

The lines company said suburbs that had overhead powerlines were at most risk from the latest bout of bad weather.

Chief Operations Officer Peter Ryan said crews had been on standby overnight and Vector was monitoring the state of the network 24/7.

"We'll be dispatching crews into the field whenever we get significant loss of outage, safety being paramount - some of the work we do can really only safely be conducted during daylight hours."