Kaiaua resident Alex Corbett never believed in climate change - but a large storm that hit the Firth of Thames in January, flooding his home and dozens of others, was an eye-opener for him.

Photo: RNZ / Supplied

"I've been a total non-believer up until the fact."

He said he saw Al Gore's documentary last year which began to open his eyes but after seeing the tide take over his town, he was now a firm believer.

The storm that flooded Mr Corbett's home was the first major one of 2018 - since then several cyclones have battered the country during a record-breaking summer.

Niwa figures show the average temperature nation-wide during the summer months was 18.8°C, which is 0.3° above the previous record set in 1934-35.

The seas around New Zealand saw temperatures that were 6° above average, while a high of 38.7° in Alexandra on 30 January was the country's hottest January temperature in 39 years.

It wasn't just warm weather affecting the country though - cyclones and flooding prompted 10 civil defence state of emergencies to be declared in the past three months.

That's compared to 13 throughout all of last year.

Photo: Supplied / Ian Turnbull

The Insurance Council estimates extreme weather has caused $65 million worth of damage - Cyclone Fehi alone cost $39m and the costs from Cyclone Gita have yet to be tallied.

Mr Corbett said having seen the extreme weather that was being caused by climate change, he was worried about other coastal communities in New Zealand.

"I think the vast majority of the population are like me - you hear the stories from the ... greenies, saying 'global warming, global warming' and I think we are behind the eight ball now."

Climate Change Minister James Shaw said New Zealand was experiencing the effects of a warming planet and the past summer had created much more discussion around the issue.

"It's become a topic of conversation in a way that it really wasn't before, and it's not just because people are looking at the data, but because people's felt experience is so different.

"We're having this extraordinary summer, multiple cyclones, flooding and people are starting to join the dots and going 'that thing we've been talking about for some time, climate change, this is what it feels like'," he said.

Mr Shaw said people now accepted climate change was being caused by humans and that more action was needed to stop it.

"We also need to have more of a conversation about how we adapt to the effects of climate change, now that we are definitely starting to feel them.

"That's not something that we've had a whole lot of work done in New Zealand on and it's something that I hope this year we make some progress on," he said.

Niwa meteorologist Chris Brandolino said what had started as a dry summer, with droughts declared in parts of the lower North Island and areas of the south, turned very wet.

"When you look at rainfall totals for the summer season, a lot of places experienced rainfall that probably wasn't too far from normal but when you drill down and look at how that rainfall was distributed, it was anything but normal.

"It wasn't distributed evenly," he said.

The warm weather isn't over yet - Mr Brandolino said Niwa was forecasting higher than average temperatures for the three months to June with a higher risk of heavy rainfall events for the northern and eastern parts of the North Island.