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Meteorological Service of New Zealand Limited, or simply MetService (Māori: Te Ratonga Tirorangi, lit. 'satellite service'), is the national meteorological service of New Zealand . MetService was established as a state-owned enterprise in 1992.
Following lighter rain on 30 and 31 January, areas of Auckland flooded for a second time on the morning of 1 February after more heavy downpours. [10] MetService reported that about 20–30 millimetres per hour (0.79–1.18 inches per hour) of "intensive rainfall" had fallen in parts of Auckland in the early hours of 1 February. [29]
As of 2019, NIWA had 697 staff spread across 14 sites in New Zealand and one in Perth, Australia. [2] Its head office is in Auckland, with regional offices in Hamilton, Wellington, Christchurch, Nelson, and Lauder (Central Otago).
A large range between 1 and 10 day forecasts are available, delivering 4 and 40 images, respectively, spaced at +6 hour intervals, beginning with the forecast time. These weather forecast charts are generated by software written and maintained by James McGregor. The data used is obtained from the United States National Weather Service. These ...
The JTWC also discontinued warnings on the system around 21:00 UTC that day [22] Gabrielle was downgraded to a Category 2 tropical cyclone by the MetService. [23] During 11 February, after Gabrielle had passed directly over Norfolk Island, the BoM and MetService reported that Gabrielle had weakened into a deep subtropical low. [24] [25]
[3] [4] [5] During October 2022, the ACWCL joined NIWA, BoM, MetService and various Pacific meteorological services with contributing towards the Southwest Pacific tropical cyclone outlook. [7] This outlook suggested that between six and ten named tropical cyclones would occur between 135°E and 120°W, while three to four of these tropical ...
Ken Ring is a writer from Auckland, New Zealand, who asserts that he can use lunar cycles to predict weather and earthquakes.He terms his predictions "alternative weather" and has authored books about the weather and climate.
An example of this is Auckland which has a variation of just 9 °C or 16 °F between the average mid-winter high temperature (14.7 °C or 58.5 °F) and average mid-summer high temperature (23.7 °C or 74.7 °F). Temperature variation throughout the day is also relatively small.