Hindcasting the First Tornado Forecast in Europe: 25 June 1967
Abstract
The tornado outbreak of 24-25 June 1967 was the most damaging in the history of western Europe, producing 7 F2-F5 tornadoes, 232 injuries, and 15 fatalities across France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Following tornadoes in France on 24 June, the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) issued a tornado forecast for 25 June, which became the first ever—and first verified—tornado forecast in Europe. Fifty-two years later, tornadoes are still not usually forecast by most European national meteorological services, and a pan-European counterpart to the NOAA/NWS/Storm Prediction Center (SPC) does not exist to provide convective outlook guidance; yet, tornadoes remain an extant threat. This article asks, "What would a modern-day forecast of the 24-25 June 1967 outbreak look like?" To answer this question, a model simulation of the event is used in three ways: 20-km grid-spacing output to produce a SPC-style convective outlook provided by the European Storm Forecast Experiment (ESTOFEX), 800-m grid-spacing output to analyze simulated reflectivity and surface winds in a nowcasting analog, and 800-m grid-spacing output to produce storm-total footprints of updraft helicity maxima to compare to observed tornado tracks. The model simulates a large supercell on 24 June and weaker embedded mesocyclones on 25 June forming along a stationary front, allowing the ESTOFEX outlooks to correctly identify the threat. Updraft helicity footprints indicate multiple mesocyclones on both days within 40-50 km and 3-4 h of observed tornado tracks, demonstrating the ability to hindcast a large European tornado outbreak.
- Publication:
-
Weather and Forecasting
- Pub Date:
- April 2020
- DOI:
- 10.1175/WAF-D-19-0173.1
- Bibcode:
- 2020WtFor..35..417A