logo
Report on South West Pacific climate prompts plea to public, governments

Report on South West Pacific climate prompts plea to public, governments

RNZ News05-06-2025

South West Pacific region includes New Zealand.
Photo:
AFP PHOTO/Torsten BLACKWOOD
A new report into the climate of the South West Pacific - including New Zealand - shows "shocking" changes, World Meteorological Organisation's director for the region says.
Last year was the hottest year on record for the South West Pacific region.
Average temperatures in the region were about half a degree Celsius above even the comparatively recent 1991-2020 average, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said.
The WMO earlier said that 2024 was the hottest for the planet as a whole across all of its different datasets.
Dunedin's floods in October received a mention among the year's extreme weather.
WMO's director for the region Ben Churchill said the organisation's 2024 report into the
state of the climate in the South-West Pacific
showed "alarming" changes.
He said the reports "unprecedented" findings were shocking and should be used to pressure governments to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
"We keep talking about things that we've never seen before, and this [report] just continues that trend," Churchill said.
"Really what we want to see is that this report is spread far and wide by this community, by the media, but picked up by decision makers and policy makers and understood by sectors that are particularly vulnerable to climate, but even just the general community, so they understand what is at stake what is happening in their part of the world at a regional level....and perhaps they could use it to encourage their governments to take stronger climate action.
"Lives are being lost and still the economic impact continues to go up."
Both ends of New Zealand were singled out for their unusual rainfall patterns - the north being unusually dry and the south unusually wet.
The report said the Philippines was hammered by an unprecedented 12 storms during the September-November tropical cyclone season - more than double the average.
In the space of less than four weeks, five tropical cyclones made landfall in the Philippines, killing 150 people.
Nearly 40 million km2 of ocean was affected by marine heatwaves - more than 10 percent of the global ocean surface area, or almost the size of the Asian continent, the report said.
WMO earlier said every one of the years from 2015 to 2024 were one of the 10 warmest on record globally.
A slip in Dunedin on 7 October after massive downpours caused floods, landslides and road closures.
Photo:
RNZ / Charlotte Cook
Dunedin's floods in October were on the list of extreme events, along with heatwaves in Australia and Malaysia and other events. During the storms, Dunedin residents said the flooding was like
nothing they'd seen
.
The Philippines was hammered by storms.
"In the space of less than four weeks there were five tropical cyclones that made landfall in the Philippines and a sixth that didn't quite make landfall but still was close enough to have significant impacts on land, and that's a sequence that hasn't been seen before in that region," one of the report's lead authors, Australian climate scientist Blair Trewin said.
"There were 150 deaths in total in the Philippines from this sequence of cyclones and very extensive economic losses to agriculture and elsewhere."
Trewin said while said 150 deaths were tragic and shocking, early warnings had saved more lives from being lost and he urged countries to get behind implementing early warning systems.
WMO lead author Thea Turkington said 2024's record year for heating in the South West Pacific region was reflected across every indicator the WMO measures - including ice, rainfall, oceans, overall temperatures and extreme events.
Malaysia, Indonesia, the northern Philippines, northern Australia, eastern Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands were also extra wet, while the southern coast of Australia, the Cook Islands, the Marshall Islands and Hawaii were extra dry.
"For every one degree of warming in the atmosphere the atmosphere can hold an extra 7 percent of moisture, so we are seeing these extreme situations both in terms of rainfall but also on the other end of the scale we are seeing extreme drought," Churchill said.
"The global warming is actually changing the water cycle quite significantly so every fraction of a degree has an impact and it really highlights the importance of more ambitious climate action."
Churchill added that when storms were hitting the Philippines with such frequency "no one can really prepare for that," despite what he called "commendable" use of early warning systems.
He said it would be harder for the Pacific Islands to recover economically from the impacts of climate change, because of their vulnerability.
The report also provided an update on one of the world's last remaining
tropical glaciers
in West Papua, which Turkington said could be gone as soon as 2026.
"In Indonesia, glacier ice loss continued rapidly in 2024, with the total ice area in the western part of New Guinea declining by 30-50 percent since 2022," the report said.
Atmospheric concentrations of the three major greenhouse gases reached new record observed highs in 2023, the latest year for which global figures are available.
Sea level rise and ocean warming had accelerated in the region, the report said.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inquest into Cyclone Gabrielle and Auckland Anniversary flooding deaths gets underway
Inquest into Cyclone Gabrielle and Auckland Anniversary flooding deaths gets underway

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

Inquest into Cyclone Gabrielle and Auckland Anniversary flooding deaths gets underway

Flooding on Candia Road in Henderson Valley, west Auckland on 27 January 2023. Photo: Supplied The timeliness and effectiveness of weather warnings and the emergency response to the Auckland Anniversary floods and Cyclone Gabrielle will come under scrutiny in a coroner's inquest that gets underway in Auckland on Monday. The inquest will look into the 18 weather-related fatalities in the Auckland floods and Cyclone Gabrielle in early 2023, including three men who died in the months following the weather events. The hearings are set down for about six weeks - with phase one taking place in Auckland between late June and August, and phase two in Hastings between October and November. The Auckland part of the inquest will focus on the deaths of the four men who died during the Auckland Anniversary floods , and the two firefighters who died in Muriwai during Cyclone Gabrielle . Daniel Miller, 34, was helping rescue others in the severely flooded Wairau Valley in Auckland's North Shore, and was later found dead in a culvert on Target Road. Daniel Newth, 25, was swept into the Wairau Valley while kayaking in floodwaters. David Lennard, 78, died after his Remuera home was destroyed in a landslide. Dave Young, 58, was swept away in floodwaters in the rural Waikato town of Onewhero. Two volunteer Muriwai firefighters, Craig Stevens and Dave van Zwanenberg, died in a landslide two weeks following the floods - during Cyclone Gabrielle - after they were critically injured when attending a major slip callout. A ruling by Coroner Erin Woolley on the scope of the inquest said she would be examining what warnings were issued to the public about the dangers of the flood waters at the time, and whether they were timely, complete and adequate. She said she would look into important issues raised by Young's family - which is the messaging for people living in areas near the border between different local authorities or Civil Defence Emergency Management groups, as well as the availability of search and rescue resources on the ground. Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown's handling of the flooding came in for heavy criticism. Photo: RNZ/Angus Dreaver Woolley will also inquire about whether the emergency response in Auckland was adequate and well-coordinated . The authorities' knowledge of the risks of landslides at Shore Road in Remuera and Muriwai before the weather events will also be examined. Woolley said she will be inquiring whether any parties should have taken actions to address those risks. Woolley acknowledged that both Fire and Emergency and WorkSafe had completed investigations on the circumstances around the deaths of Van Zwanenberg and Stevens, however she said both investigations were limited in the evidence from witnesses. She added that she would look into whether it was appropriate for emergency responders to be doing work in areas at risk of landslides during Cyclone Gabrielle. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Weather: 'Another significant' wave of storms on way for Tasman, Nelson in flood aftermath
Weather: 'Another significant' wave of storms on way for Tasman, Nelson in flood aftermath

RNZ News

time2 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Weather: 'Another significant' wave of storms on way for Tasman, Nelson in flood aftermath

A flooded Riwaka property. Photo: Samantha Gee / RNZ MetService are warning the storm-battered Tasman and Nelson regions to prepare for more thunderstorms, wind and rain later this week. It comes as the area's deal with the aftermath of after heavy rain on Friday and Saturday. MetService's head of weather news Heather Keats told Morning Report the unfortunate weather was what they had expected. "We have been looking at stats, and Nelson and Blenheim had their wettest June days on the 26, and Blenheim, it was their third wettest day on record and unfortunately there is more to come. "Another front that will bring rain and a string of north-easterly to many." Keats said the next wild weather was set to hit on Wednesday night, with a second wave on Friday. "It is likely to to be another significant event and it will lead to watches and warnings," she said. Thunderstorms were forecast to bring heavy rain to Nelson, Blenheim, Buller and Marlborough. "Unfortunately it is going to be a similar event [to last weekend]." The front was too far out to comment on the specific timings and amount of rainfall, she said. Flooding on a farm at Wai-Iti near Wakefield on 27 June 2025. Photo: Supplied Nelson and Tasman have been crying out for better warning systems so they can better prepare for these serious weather events. Civil Defence Minister Mark Mitchell told Morning Report he was committed to "finding a way through with the rain radar", but did not confirm whether the regions would get one. After recently surveying the damage by helicopter , Mitchell said there was "lots of surface flooding and significant damage to rural properties in the Tasman region". Civil Defence Minister Mark Mitchell. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone When asked about whether he would answer the calls for a new rain radar, he said he was working towards getting one in place. "That's obviously been raised with me and I was like look lets work together, i'm very open to finding a way through and providing support from central government to get a rain radar in place." But Mitchell said the problem was the region had many valleys that were very close together and caused problems in predicting the weather. "I'm very committed to finding a way through with the rain radar," Mitchell added. He also said there was a "significant" amount of mitigation projects around the country supported at a central government level. Federated Farmers president Kerry Irvine told Morning Report the scale of damage to rural properties in the region was "horrendous". "The damage to infrastructure, fences, banks is just horrendous, you've got to see it to believe it." The Motueka estuary, with Jackett Island in the foreground, after flooding in the Tasman region in June 2025. Photo: Samantha Gee / RNZ He said there was silt, debris, logs and gravel scattered throughout paddocks, but said he didn't believe it would be the end any farms. "It's not in our nature as New Zealand farmers to give up, it's just not in our DNA. "We are down, don't get me wrong, we are down, but we will get up again and we will repair our farms and put them back together. "It will be a long road and a challenging time ahead," he said. A mayoral relief fund has set up to support Nelson City and Tasman District residents, ratepayers or business owners and not-for-profit organisations who have suffered financial hardship because of the flood event. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store