Five more days from the official hottest summer on record
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2018
Five more days from the
official hottest summer on record
Despite a sub-tropical storm and two ex-tropical cyclones, this summer is about to become the hottest in history.
There are just five days of summer left and unless they are unprecedentedly cold, NIWA climate scientists say this summer will surpass a record that has been held for more than 80 years.
Until now, the hottest summer in historical record is 1934/35 where the temperature was 1.8°C above the 1981-2010 average. This summer is currently running at 2.3°C, 0.5° above the previous record.
NIWA meteorologist Ben Noll says the driver of this summer’s remarkable warmth has been the marine heatwave.
“This has been a striking feature on both a regional and global climate scale,” Mr Noll says.
“It began at the end of November last year
and has now persisted for three months. There have been
three distinct peaks when sea surface temperatures were
between 2 to 4°C above average:
mid-December, late
January and mid-late February.”
But Mr Noll says there were even some areas where sea surface temperatures were 6 or 7°C above average.
“This represented some of the largest ocean temperature anomalies anywhere in the world over the last several months.”
Mr Noll says a warmer than average Tasman Sea is a signature of La Niña, as it is associated with higher than normal air pressure over the region during the late-spring and early-summer – this prevents mixing of deeper, cooler sea water to the surface. In addition, warm northeasterly winds pushed warm water toward the country from the sub-tropics.
Meanwhile, NIWA principal climate scientist Dr Brett Mullan has delved into the record books and found that the previous hottest summer on record of 1934/35 was so unusual it prompted New Zealand Meteorological Service director Dr Edward Kidson to report on it in a special Meteorological Office Note.
Dr
Mullan says the note shows there were several similarities
to this summer, including widespread drought from November
to mid-February.
Dr Kidson wrote that a: “feature of
the pressure distribution was that the high pressure belt
and tracks of moving anticyclones were unusually far south
in the New Zealand area, generally crossing the Dominion
instead of passing to the north of it.”
Dr Mullan says the persistence of anticyclones and north-easterly winds have also been a feature of this summer.
Over land, Dr Kidson noted that “in none of the four months November [1934] to February [1935] did any station in New Zealand record a mean temperature which was not above normal”.
Summer standouts so far
108 places
across New Zealand recorded their hottest summer on record,
21 their 2nd hottest and eight their 3rd hottest.
In
Alexandra on January 30 the temperature reached 38.7 °C. On
the same day Clyde got to 37.6, Middlemarch 37.4 and Cheviot
37.3 – together these comprise the hottest temperatures of
summer.
Wellington has had 17 days above 25°C this
summer – the average is two.
Auckland usually has 29
summer days above 25°C, this year there have been 47 –
the highest since records began at Auckland Airport in
1966.
Invercargill recorded three consecutive days over
30°C in January. It’s never done that for two days in a
row, let alone three.
Cromwell has topped 25°C for 56
days – normal is 35 days.
Dew point temperature – the
meteorological measurement combining humidity and
temperature – failed to drop below 19°C in Auckland from
February 10-15, making it a rare 115-hour period of very
high humidity.
In Wellington a dew point temperature of
22°C at 6pm on February 11, the highest dew point on record
for the city.
Mahia, Appleby and Waipara West have had
their wettest summers on record.
ends