TORNADO EARLY WARNING SYSTEM A tornado warning means there is immediate danger for the
warned and immediately surrounding area -- if not from the relatively
narrow tornado itself, from the severe thunderstorm producing (or likely
to produce) it. All in the path of such a storm are urged to take cover
immediately, as it is a life-threatening situation. A warning should not
be confused with a tornado watch (issued by a national guidance center,
the Storm Prediction Center) which only indicates that conditions are
favorable for the formation of tornadoes.
In the United States, local offices of the National Weather Service
issue warnings for tornadoes and severe thunderstorms on a per-county
basis, narrowing down to parts of counties in many cases, and usually
with a narrower pathcast of where the tornado(s) is expected to track
within the area is mentioned in the warning message.
In Canada, similar criteria are used and warnings are issued by regional
offices of the Meteorological Service of Canada of Environment Canada in
Vancouver, Edmonton, Toronto, Montreal and Halifax.
Tornado warnings are generated via computer then disseminated through
various communication routes accessed by the media and various agencies,
on the internet, to NOAA satellites, and on NOAA Weather Radio. Civil
defense sirens are also activated for the affected areas if present.
The first tornado warning was issued by the meteorological staff of
Tinker Air Force Base in 1947 and was also coincidentally the first
successful tornado forecast.