Climate & Weather

Understanding our variable and changing climate is critical for managing resources and reducing risks.

  • NIWA's Hotspot Watch for 17 October 2018

    Hotspot
    There are no currently no hotspots, but an area to monitor is in the southern Hurunui District in northern Canterbury.
  • A say on the sea shore

    Feature story
    Coastal communities around New Zealand are getting a say on how to respond to sea-level rise, and NIWA is helping them.
  • NIWA 2018 glacier survey

    Feature story
    What happens when the contribution from seasonal snow and ice melt changes in a warmer world?
  • Fieldays - farming for the future

    Feature story
    Farmers visiting Fieldays at Mystery Creek in June could not have missed the take-home message: that science and innovation are key to their continued success.
  • Te Huringa ki te Rangi – He Rautaki Tāwariwari. Adapting to climate change – a decision-making model for Indigenous Peoples

    Te Huringa ki te Rangi is a decision-making model to support indigenous and coastal communities who are grappling to understand and evaluate climate change impacts and risks, and how to integrate these into their development plans for the future.
  • Sudden spring sun for south

    Media release
    A cool start to spring is about to be replaced by a sudden burst of warmth, according to NIWA meteorologist Ben Noll.
  • Councils get help to prepare for sea-level rise

    Media release
    A senior NIWA scientist is concerned many councils are having difficulty “getting off the starting blocks” when it comes to planning for coastal climate change.
  • Warmth dramatically outpaces chill so far this year

    Media release
    It's a story of the warm and the wet.
  • Climate change scenarios through to 2110

  • Climate change touch screen - Fieldays

    The touch screen in action at Fieldays.revealing how our climate will change across the country.
  • NIWA seaweed scientist tackling global climate change issue

    Media release
    One of the world's leading scientific publishers has named a paper cowritten by a NIWA scientist as one of 250 groundbreaking findings that could "help change the world".
  • Our Climate is Changing

    Our climate is changing - we need to act now.