1. Home
  2. Knowledge Base | PreventionWeb
  3. Hazards
Mediterranean super-storms have been called ‘medicanes’ combining the words ‘Mediterranean’ with ‘hurricane’. Storm Daniel unleashed devastation across Bulgaria, Türkiye, Greece and Libya in 2023.

Thunderstorms are different from cyclones in the following ways:

  • Formation: Thunderstorms can form overland whereas cyclones form over warm ocean waters.
  • Scale: Thunderstorms are relatively small, localized weather events, typically spanning a few kilometers in diameter. Cyclones are much larger weather systems, typically covering hundreds to thousands of kilometers in diameter.
  • Features: Thunderstorms are characterized by the presence of lightning, thunder, heavy rain, strong winds, and sometimes hail. Cyclones are characterized by strong winds, heavy rainfall, storm surges.
  • Duration: Thunderstorms usually last from about 30 minutes to a few hours and cyclones can last for several days to over a week.
  • Impact: Thunderstorms can cause localized damage whereas cyclones can cause widespread and severe damage.

(Source: National Weather Service (NWS), American Meteorological Society (AMS), World Meteorological Organization (WMO), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA))

This hazard category also covers hazards such as:

  • Hail: Hail is precipitation in the form of particles of ice (hailstones). These can be either transparent, or partly or completely opaque. They are usually spheroidal, conical or irregular in form, and generally 5−50 mm in diameter. The particles may fall from a cloud either separately or agglomerated in irregular lumps (WMO, 2017).
  • Lightning: Lightning is the luminous manifestation accompanying a sudden electrical discharge which takes place from or inside a cloud or, less often, from high structures on the ground or from mountains (WMO, 2017).
  • Derecho: Derechos are fast-moving bands of thunderstorms with destructive winds. The winds can be as strong as those found in hurricanes or even tornadoes. Unlike hurricanes and tornadoes, these winds follow straight lines (NOAA, 2019).
  • Strong wind: Wind is air motion relative to the Earth’s surface. Human health can be severely affected by windstorms

As an example of National Alerting Parameters, the United States Weather Service defines a thunderstorm as a severe thunderstorm when it produces hail one inch (2.54 cm) or larger in diameter and/or winds equal or exceed 58 mph (93 kmh) (NOAA, no date c).

Latest Thunderstorm additions in the Knowledge Base

Uploaded on
Research briefs

As India grapples with record heat and a delayed monsoon, the research paints a sobering picture: climate change is creating a deadly "dual threat" of extreme humid heat and catastrophic rainfall.

Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Research briefs

Traditional global climate models were like early digital cameras — they had only about ten thousand pixels to cover the entire planet. At that low resolution, big storm systems looked like blurry blobs.

Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
State of the Climate in Asia 2025 thumbnail
Documents and publications

The WMO State of the Climate in Asia 2025 reports that ocean heat, which has increased since the 1990s, reached a new record.

World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
Coloured houses on a windy day
Research briefs

The study showed that trees around a low-rise building can reduce the wind force on segments by as much as 50%.

Florida International University
Assessing climate-driven storm impacts on geographically isolated communities and underserved vulnerable populations thumbnail
Documents and publications

This research examined emerging risks posed by increased storm frequency and intensity to high-latitude vulnerable communities previously unaccustomed to extratropical cyclonic events.

International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction (Elsevier)
Wave surge during a storm in northern France, in 2019.
Research briefs

Spring storms forming over the North Atlantic have become more common than they were 80 years ago, and this is due to climate change.

University of Gothenburg
Update

How long can our clay dykes withstand severe storms with high waves?

Deltares
Update

More than 1 billion people worldwide live in such areas.

Yale Climate Connections
Uploaded on