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A total of 57 tornadoes were confirmed during the outlook period; one was rated EF4. The strongest tornadoes were in or nearby to the High Risk. This is the last occurrence of back to back high risk days for at least a decade (continuing as of May 2024; and three consecutive high risk days have not occurred in 25 years, since May 1999).
2024: California [309] 20,000: 0: Mountain Fire [310] December 10: 2024: California [311] 4,037 [nb 2] 0: Franklin Fire [312] January 8: 2025: California [313] 55,082 [nb 2] 27 [314] January 2025 Southern California wildfires [315] – First extremely critical risk day in January since 2008, and the first extremely critical risk day in January ...
On May 6, a tornado-driven high risk was issued by the Storm Prediction Center across central, north central, and, later, northeastern Oklahoma and south central Kansas, highlighting a 30 percent significant tornado probability over the High Risk area. However, throughout the day, only weak tornadoes occurred across the Plains.
High risk days like this only happen on 4% of days each year, but account for more than 80% of all flood damage and more than a third of all flood deaths in the United States, according to the WPC.
2024: May 3: Robert Lee, Texas EF1 tornado: EF1 2024: ... List of Storm Prediction Center high risk days; List of United States tornado emergencies; References
After the solstice, every day will have a little more sunlight than the one before. By the time we reach the summer solstice on June 20, 2025, it will be the longest day of the year.
August 27, 2024 at 1:15 PM The warmest day in 2024 was June 17, when the temperature reached 93 degrees. The National Weather Service in Indianapolis expects to beat that temperature high today .
High risk convective outlook issued by the Storm Prediction center at 13:00 UTC on May 6. Starting April 30, the Storm Prediction Center noted that certain models, including the ECMWF, forecasted a multi-day period of high instability and supportive wind shear across the Southern and Central Plains, [10] and by May 1, a 15% risk was added across Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and northern Texas. [11]