UV and Ozone

This is the home for NIWA's UV and ozone research, including maps and graphs showing daily predictions and measurements for UV levels across New Zealand.

This information is provided by NIWA free of charge and can be used only for personal use. Repackaging and on-selling in any form is prohibited.

What is the UV Index (UVI)?

The UV index (UVI) is a standard measurement of erythemal (sun-burn causing) UV intensity that gives a more objective measure than the old “time to burn” (which cannot account for skin tone). The scale is open-ended, but a UVI of greater than 10 is extreme and a UVI of less than 3 is low. For clear skies, the UVI depends mainly on the sun elevation angle and the ozone amount.

The UVI also depends on cloud cover, sun-earth separation, altitude, pollution, and surface reflections (e.g., snow cover). The highest values in the world occur in the tropics at high altitudes, where the UVI can exceed 25. The geographical and seasonal variation in peak UVI for New Zealand can be viewed below. In the NZ winter, the UVI rarely exceeds 3. Because of differences in ozone, sun-earth separation and pollution, the peak UVI in NZ is approximately 40% greater than at comparable latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere.

Geographical and seasonal variation in peak UVI - NZ (PDF 16KB)

Measured UVI at specific New Zealand sites

View graphs showing today's predicted and measured UVI at several sites in New Zealand. The measurements, which are from UV monitors maintained by NIWA, are updated at 15 minute intervals. The model predictions include forecast cloud effects.

View graphs with yesterday's UVI values.

See the "Data availability" section further down this page for various UVI, ozone, UV radiation, and total radiation data sources.

Click link below to go to service

Today's UV index plot with Hour on the x-axis and UV index on the Y axis.
Today's UV index at Lauder. Higher the level, the greater risk of skin damage.
UVI at Lauder

Service type: Graphics / Interpretation / Visualisation

Today's UVI forecasts

Maps showing forecast UVI and ozone for the whole of New Zealand for noon (12:00 NZST, 0:00 UTC) can be found at the links below. The forecasts are modelled using available satellite ozone data.

Yesterday
UV Index Clear Sky
Ozone
TodayUV Index Clear Sky
Ozone

View graphs showing UVI forecasts for specific sites in New Zealand and the South Pacific region.

When the UVI is low (less than 3), the World Health Organization recommends that no protection is required and short exposures to sunlight will be beneficial for vitamin D production. At all other times some protection to avoid sunburn is recommended. The "UV Sun Protection Alert Period" is defined as the period when the clear sky forecast is greater than UVI = 3, a level at which damage to fair skin can occur in less than 1 hour. However, a recent publication showed that even when the UVI is less than 2, damage to fair skin can occur for exposure periods less than 2 hours.  When the UVI = 12, damage to fair skin can occur in less than 15 minutes. For darker Polynesian skin types the safe exposure periods can be doubled. Further details on UV and health are provided by the Health Promotion Agency's Sunsmart and the Cancer Society's Sunsmart Schools.

UVI data for developers

NIWA's API for UVI (ultraviolet index) forecasts allows developers access to a time series of UVI forecasts as well as various UV data charts and images.

Smartphone apps

UVNZ and uv2Day (uv2Day is the predecessor to UVNZ) are smartphone apps that provide UVI forecasts for selectable locations within New Zealand, Australia, the South Pacific region, and Antarctica. 

The GlobalUV app provides estimates of current UVI for any location throughout the globe.

See further details about these current and forecast UVI web apps.

Note: these apps are not NIWA products.

Lauder Ozone

A graph of daily ozone measurements at Lauder over this year compared with past years (climatological variability). Ozone column amounts are measured in Dobson Units (DU), where 1 DU = 2.69 x 1016 molecule/cm2

Data availability

  • Ozone, cloud transmission, total radiation and various biological weightings of UV radiation can be extracted for approximately 100 sites in the New Zealand region using the NIWA UV Atlas.
  • Erythemally-weighted UV irradiances (UV Index values) from Lauder and several other sites in the New Zealand region can be extracted from the NIWA Climate database. Select Datatype/Daily and Hourly Observations/Sunshine and Radiation/UV radiation to access historical 10-minute mean UVI values. These data are available from the same sites as plotted above for Yesterday's UVI, as specified in the site-selection menu. Download a detailed explanation of the calculation of UVI for MED (Minimal Erythemal Dose). [PDF 800KB]
  • UV radiation data (and trace gas data) from Lauder compared with other global sites can be accessed from the international Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC).
  • Other radiation data, including aerosol optical depths from Lauder compared with other global sites can be accessed from the international Baseline Surface Radiation Network.
  • UV data from Lauder compared with other North American locations can be accessed from the US Department of Agriculture.  

Assessments of ozone depletion and its effects

NIWA scientists contribute to regular international assessments of ozone depletion and its environmental impacts, as required under the terms of the Montreal Protocol on Protection of the Ozone Layer. These assessments include responses, in simple layman's terms, to Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs).

Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion: 2018

NIWA contributes to the four-yearly global assessment of ozone depletion led by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

Read the Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion: 2018 report (published in full February 2019). [PDF 45MB]

Measurements from NIWA’s atmospheric monitoring station at Lauder are the only Southern Hemisphere data available in several key parts of the report, underscoring Lauder’s position as the leading observatory of its kind in southern mid-latitudes.  

The latest report shows that the ozone layer is continuing to recover. However, the leading ozone depleting substance, CFC-11, is declining more slowly than expected, due to continuing illegal emissions from East Asia.

NIWA UV Spectrometer Systems

NIWA has been engaged in an active UV Research Programme since the 1980s. The cornerstone of this work is the routine accurate measurement of the spectrum of surface UV irradiance to quantify UV climatologies, to understand the causes of UV variability (temporally and spatially), and to monitor long-term changes.

Read more about NIWA's UV spectrometer systems

Personal UV Dosimeters

There is widespread public interest in the relationships between UV radiation and health. The effects of UV on health can be harmful—as in its effect on skin cancer rates, or beneficial – as in the case of its effect on vitamin D status. In the past, researchers have attempted to determine these relationships as functions of ambient UV radiation. However, the UV doses that humans are typically receive are less than 5% of that available UV.

More about personal UV dosimeters

Latest All-Sky Image at Lauder, New Zealand

The all-sky image shows a hemispheric view of the sky at Lauder. These images record the cloud cover at Lauder for use in the atmospheric radiation research. The images are updated every 10 minutes and an archive image is available for each of the last 24 hours.

View Lauder all-sky image.

  • UV Atlas

    More information about NIWA's UV Atlas
  • UV Index at Leigh - 17 October 2023

    Today's UV Index

    Today's UV Index
  • UV Index at Leigh - 16 October 2023

    Yesterday's UV Index

    Plots of UV levels throughout the day at different locations.
  • UV index signage at Lauder

    UV Index Information

    The UV Index is a measure of the intensity of UV radiation. The larger the number, the more intense the UV. In New Zealand, its maximum summer value is generally about 12, but it can exceed 13 in the far North. In winter it reaches peak values of 1 or 2. Values of 10 or more should be considered as "extreme". At high altitude tropical sites (eg Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii), the UV Index can exceed 20.The UV Index supersedes the idea of "Time to Burn" or "Burn Time", which has been used previously in New Zealand.
  • Lauder Atmospheric Research Station

    UVI forecast for Specific Sites

    Check out UV index forecasts for locations in New Zealand (including ski fields), Australia, the Pacific and Antarctica.
  • Front and rear views of a Mark I dosimeter badge. [NIWA]

    Personal UV Dosimeters

    NIWA has developed personal UV dosimeter badges to support studies relating UV exposure to human health.
  • UV Science Workshops

    Find out more about our national UV workshops
  • UV measurement - Lauder

    UVI at Lauder

    This information is provided as part of our UV Ozone service, which also includes ozone and UV maps for New Zealand, yesterday’s forecast and measured UV, UV Atlas software, and more. NIWA has also developed an instrument to measure UV levels and display the UV Index on an easy-to-read dial. This is intended for use at swimming pools, outdoor sports events, and so on. The measured UV Index can be affected by cloud cover at Lauder.
  • UVI at Lauder

    Real-time UV Index displays

    NIWA has developed a real time UV display in consultation with the Cancer Society and Sunsmart.
  • All-sky - Lauder

    All-Sky images

    The all-sky image shows a hemispheric view of the sky at Lauder.
  • Weather app screenshots

    UVI smartphone apps

    Several apps that provide forecasts of the UV index (UVI) are available for smartphones.