
Severe Tropical Cyclone, Cyclone Vaianu has battered New Zealand’s North Island, unleashing destructive winds, torrential rainfall, and widespread infrastructure damage, while forcing large-scale evacuations and power disruptions across multiple regions.
The Category 3 system generated wind gusts reaching up to 150 km/h, with sustained severe winds exceeding 130 km/h recorded in coastal zones, particularly across the Bay of Plenty and Waikato.
Thousands of households were left without electricity as the storm downed power lines and damaged essential infrastructure, although partial restoration efforts are underway.
Landfall occurred along the eastern coastline, where emergency authorities had already ordered precautionary evacuations due to rapidly deteriorating sea and weather conditions. Emergency response teams reported hundreds of callouts as the cyclone’s outer bands intensified conditions across affected regions.
New Zealand’s Meteorological Service, MetService, classified the system as a “multi-hazard, potentially life-threatening event,” citing extreme wind strength, heavy precipitation, and hazardous coastal surges.
In response, multiple regions were placed under state of emergency declarations, accompanied by red-level wind warnings reserved for the most extreme weather events. Additional support, including personnel from the New Zealand Defence Force, has been deployed to assist evacuation and relief operations.
Officials confirmed that the cyclone’s track shifted slightly eastward, sparing Auckland the nation’s most populous city from its most severe impact.
However, authorities cautioned that significant rainfall, flooding risks, and coastal inundation remain likely as the system progresses southward across the North Island.
Emergency Management Minister Mark Mitchell noted that while the cyclone’s altered trajectory reduced the scale of potential destruction, several regions continue to face dangerous conditions. He further warned that weather threats will persist until the system fully clears the region.
The storm has drawn comparisons to Cyclone Gabrielle in 2023, one of New Zealand’s most destructive natural disasters in recent history, which caused extensive damage and multiple fatalities.
Authorities remain on high alert as Cyclone Vaianu continues its path toward the eastern and southern parts of the North Island.



