.jpg)
What was meant to be a weekend escape to Dunedin turned into a test of nerves for passengers aboard Air New Zealand flight NZ676 on Saturday, September 13, 2025. After two unsuccessful landing attempts at Dunedin Airport, the flight was forced to abandon its approach and return to Auckland, citing extreme windshear as the culprit.
"Close Calls" amid Wild Winds
COO Alex Marren made clear that safety dictated the decision. Winds gusting up to 78 km/h created turbulence and unstable air currents dangerously close to the runway conditions too risky to complete the landing.
Eyewitness footage shared on social media by broadcaster Matty McLean, who was among the passengers, shows the plane dropping toward the runway during the second approach eliciting cheers from those on board before pulling up sharply at the last moment.
McLean, who had flown down with hopes of running the Dunedin Marathon, said the first approach was aborted quickly; the second brought the aircraft almost to the ground before the pilot initiated a go-around. “Everybody thought we were landing… then, at the last moment, we pulled up again,” he said, calling the experience “pretty scary.”
Passenger Care and Disruption
Once back in Auckland, Air New Zealand re-accommodated affected passengers on later services. McLean, in particular, lost out: missing the Dunedin Marathon was a bitter blow after training and travel preparations. Still, he praised the flight crew for their calm handling of the emergency.
Weather Chaos in Otago
Saturday’s conditions in the Otago region were already volatile. Alongside the windshear, Dunedin was buffeted by strong crosswinds and gusts that disrupted multiple arrivals. Authorities had issued weather warnings, and forecasts suggested that while Sunday might be calmer, intense winds remained possible in exposed and coastal locations.
Safety First Amid Growing Disruption
This isn’t the first time flights into Dunedin have been thwarted by severe weather. Past incidents include flights impacted by wind shear and turbulence, strong crosswinds, and in some cases, returning due to lightning or turbulence. Air New Zealand and MetService are regularly coordinating updates to alerts and warnings.
Aircraft and Technical Details
The aircraft in question was an 8.9-year-old Airbus A320-232, registered ZK-OXM. Its structure and crew safety procedures were tested but held firm in the face of adverse conditions.
What Passengers Take Away
For travellers like McLean, the frustration is real lost experiences, wasted time, dashed expectations. For the airline, the incident underscores a double challenge: balancing safety in unpredictable weather with managing passenger expectations and logistical fallback for disrupted schedules.
McLean hopes for another shot at Dunedin and the marathon in 2026. He summed up what many onboard felt: disappointment, yes, but also acknowledgement that pilots and crew made the only responsible choice under the circumstances.