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New Zealand readies for further storm damage after floods kill one person

By Thomson Reuters Feb 13, 2026 | 9:33 PM

Feb 14 (Reuters) – New Zealand was bracing for more heavy rains on Saturday after floods swept through one regional centre, causing power outages, road collapses and home evacuations while ​a man’s body was found in a vehicle submerged ‌on a highway.

The weather system is expected to intensify, with heavy rains, winds of up to 120 km/h (75 mph) and waves reaching seven metres (22 feet) affecting the capital Wellington and other areas from Sunday, New Zealand’s MetService said.

After ‌rain ​pounded Otorohanga district overnight, an agricultural region ⁠of about 10,000 people 180 ⁠km (112 miles) south of Auckland, authorities declared a state of emergency and gave a severe weather warning covering the North Island’s east coast, from the Coromandel Peninsula to the Bay of Plenty.

“This ​is devastating news for our community,” Otorohanga District Mayor Rodney Dow said, referring to the man who apparently died in his ⁠car. The authorities didn’t give the ⁠man’s name.

“Right now our focus is on supporting those ​affected by the widespread flooding, as well as the emergency workers ​and support agencies who are also helping,” Dow told a ‌news conference.

Rain began battering Otorohanga around 2 p.m. (0100 GMT) local time on Friday but worsened through the evening to the point where up to 300mm (11.8 inches) was recorded in about an hour. A ⁠pumping system designed to prevent flooding strained under the deluge, Dow said.

“A weather bomb just came across,” he added.

About 80 people had been evacuated ⁠by Saturday and  authorities set ‌up an emergency centre in a church as ⁠local government officials began assessing what Dow described ​as ‌extensive damage.

Residents who weren’t evacuated were told to ​stay in ⁠their homes and avoid floodwaters.

Images shared on social media showed vast semirural neighbourhoods submerged, with collapsed sections of road where floodwaters had receded. The images showed a vehicle bridge covered in trees and other debris apparently where water had subsided.

(Reporting by Byron Kaye in Sydney; Editing ​by Lincoln Feast.)