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Temperatures in the urban areas fell to about 10 degrees that night and plunged further in the next couple of days as strong to gale force northerly winds raged across the coastal areas. Meanwhile, an intense surge of cold air poured southwards across mainland China and reached the coast of Guangdong on 22 January, bringing appreciably colder weather with occasional rain. After a rather cold morning and some sunny periods on 18 January, easterly winds strengthened over the next couple of days and brought more clouds and rain to Hong Kong.

Rainbands associated with an upper-air disturbance and a cold front affected Hong Kong on 15 - 17 January with more than 75 millimetres of rainfall recorded at the Observatory during the period. A replenishment of the northeast monsoon reached the coast of Guangdong and temperatures dropped further in Hong Kong with relatively cool mornings on 12 and 13 January.Īfter a sunny day on 13 January, a prolonged spell of cloudy weather set in over the next 11 days. Meanwhile, easterly winds freshened on 9 January and the weather turned cloudier and cooler with rain on 10 - 11 January. It also necessitated the issuance of the Amber Rainstorm Warning, the earliest since the rainstorm warning system commenced operation in 1992.ĭespite some rain and mist patches on the morning of 6 January, the weather turned mainly fine during the day as a drier air mass reached the south China coastal areas, and remained so over the next couple of days. with 37.0 millimetres of rainfall reported at the Observatory, the highest hourly rainfall for January on record. The rain was particularly heavy between 1 p.m.

The visibility at Waglan Island once fell below 500 metres on the morning of 3 January.Īn area of heavy rain and thunderstorms associated with an upper-air disturbance affected Hong Kong on the afternoon of 5 January and brought more than 30 millimetres of rainfall to the urban areas, the eastern part of Lantau Island, and the eastern part of the New Territories. A broad band of clouds over the northern part of the South China Sea brought a few rain patches on 2 January and the weather remained cloudy with mist and fog patches in the next two days as a humid maritime airstream set in over the territory. Under the influence of a dry northeast monsoon, the weather in Hong Kong was mainly fine and dry on the first day of the month. The heavy rain on 5 January also broke the hourly rainfall record for January. With upper-air disturbances repeatedly affecting the south China coastal areas and bringing outbreaks of heavy rain, the Observatory recorded an all-time high monthly rainfall of 266.9 millimetres, more than ten times the January normal of 24.7 millimetres and easily breaking the previous record of 214.3 millimetres set way back in January 1887. Yet the monthly averaged temperature of 16.0 degrees turned out to be deceptively unremarkable, only 0.3 degree below normal. The mean sea level pressure of 1037.7 hectopascals on 24 January was the highest ever recorded at the Observatory. The unseasonably warm weather in the first three weeks of the month was totally offset by the freezing temperatures during the 3-day period of 23 - 25 January. January 2016 was characterized by an intense cold surge in the latter part of the month and exceptionally high monthly rainfall.
