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Organisations: Ministry for the Environment Formats: GTiff

  • Lightning, 2001–2016

    Ministry for the Environment
    Lightning is the discharge of electricity from thunderstorms and can occur within a cloud, between clouds, or between a cloud and the ground. By international standards, lightning does not occur frequently around New Zealand. However, ground strikes can injure or kill people and livestock, damage property and infrastructure, and, although rarely in New...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Land Environments New Zealand (LENZ) - Level 1 Grid (2010)

    Ministry for the Environment
    Land Environments of New Zealand (LENZ) is a classification of fifteen climate, landform, and soil variables chosen for their relevance to biological distributions. Classification groups were derived by automatic classification using a multivariate procedure. Four levels of classification detail have been produced from this analysis, containing 20, 100,...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Soil moisture PED annual average 1972-2014

    Ministry for the Environment
    Soil moisture is important for plant growth. A lack of moisture content over a growing season is a good indicator of drought, which can have social, environmental, and economic impacts. Increasing temperatures and changes in rainfall patterns are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of drought in many regions. Growing season soil moisture...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Average annual rainfall, 1972–2016

    Ministry for the Environment
    Rain is vital for life – it supplies the water we need to drink and to grow our food, keeps our ecosystems healthy, and supplies our electricity. New Zealand’s mountainous terrain and location in the roaring forties mean rainfall varies across the country. Changes in rainfall amount or timing can significantly affect agriculture, energy, recreation, and...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Average annual rainfall, 1972–2013

    Ministry for the Environment
    Annual rainfall is the total accumulated rain over one year. Rain is vital for life, including plant growth, drinking water, river ecosystem health, and sanitation. Floods and droughts affect our environment, economy, and recreational opportunities. This dataset shows annual average rainfall across New Zealand for years 1972 to 2013. Annual rainfall is...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Erosion risk North Island 2012

    Ministry for the Environment
    "This data records estimated erosion risk for different areas in the North Island. New Zealand experiences high rates of soil erosion. In the North Island, this is mostly due to the historical clearance of forest for agriculture (see also Estimated long-term soil erosion). In contrast, erosion in the South Island is mostly due to natural processes,...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Average annual rainfall, 2014

    Ministry for the Environment
    Rain is vital for life – it supplies the water we need to drink and to grow our food, keeps our ecosystems healthy, and supplies our electricity. New Zealand’s mountainous terrain and location in the roaring forties mean rainfall varies across the country. Changes in rainfall amount or timing can significantly affect agriculture, energy, recreation, and...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 2 April 2021
  • Average annual rainfall, 2015

    Ministry for the Environment
    Rain is vital for life – it supplies the water we need to drink and to grow our food, keeps our ecosystems healthy, and supplies our electricity. New Zealand’s mountainous terrain and location in the roaring forties mean rainfall varies across the country. Changes in rainfall amount or timing can significantly affect agriculture, energy, recreation, and...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 2 April 2021
  • Average annual rainfall, 2016

    Ministry for the Environment
    Rain is vital for life – it supplies the water we need to drink and to grow our food, keeps our ecosystems healthy, and supplies our electricity. New Zealand’s mountainous terrain and location in the roaring forties mean rainfall varies across the country. Changes in rainfall amount or timing can significantly affect agriculture, energy, recreation, and...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 2 April 2021