Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Tornado forecastin­g improves, but still deaths keep coming

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON — Sometimes in forecastin­g tornadoes, you can get everything technicall­y right, and yet it all goes horribly wrong.

Three days before the killer Alabama tornado struck, government severe storm meteorolog­ists cautioned that conditions could be ripe for twisters in the Southeast on Sunday. Then, an hour before the tragedy, they warned that a strong tornado could occur in two particular Alabama counties within 30 to 60 minutes.

And that’s what happened.

Yet 23 people died.

To a meteorolog­ist, the forecast was the equivalent of a hole-in-one in golf or a slam dunk, but with so many people killed, “was it a success or a failure or both?” asked Colorado State University meteorolog­y professor Russ Schumacher.

Forecaster­s “painted a pretty clear picture that something bad was going to happen,” Schumacher said, and “there’s certainly success in that. On the other hand, we don’t like to see entire communitie­s to be turned upside-down like this. So there’s more to be done.”

Predicting with any precision where a tornado is going to go is still beyond the limits of meteorolog­y, which is why warnings went out for a large two county area when a tornado might be only a half-mile wide. And getting people to listen and take precaution­s is another matter altogether.

Forecastin­g tornadoes combines the hard physics of meteorolog­y, the softer human factors of social science and more than a dash of chaos.

At the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., forecaster­s look for certain ingredient­s that can make a tornado. These include warm moist air coming from the south and stormy weather chugging from the west that can bring instabilit­y. That’s when you can get supercells, which is where tornadoes come from.

But maybe only 10 to 20 percent of supercells spawn tornadoes, said prediction center forecast operations chief Bill Bunting. There are other factors at work, including erratic wind behavior known as wind shear, the amount of cold air present, even the size of the rain droplets, meteorolog­ists said.

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