02/01/2026 - (niet aangemeld)

Storm Forecast Valid: Fri 27 Jul 2018 06:00 to Sat 28 Jul 2018 06:00 UTC

26-07-2018 | Estofex | m.b.t. 27-07-2018 t/m 28-07-2018

A level 1 and level 2 are issued for Belgium and parts of the Netherlands mainly for severe convective wind gusts.

Storm Forecast
Valid: Fri 27 Jul 2018 06:00 to Sat 28 Jul 2018 06:00 UTC
Issued: Thu 26 Jul 2018 23:32
Forecaster: PISTOTNIK

A level 1 and level 2 are issued from central France into E England mainly for large hail, severe convective wind gusts and to a lesser extent tornadoes.

A level 1 and level 2 are issued for Belgium and parts of the Netherlands mainly for severe convective wind gusts.

A level 1 is issued for N parts of the Black Sea for waterspouts.

All other level 1 areas, and a level 2 for parts of Moldova and the Ukraine, are issued mainly for flash floods and to a lesser extent for large hail and severe convective wind gusts.

SYNOPSIS

Another upper-level trough amplifies west of the British Isles towards N Spain. Otherwise, pressure gradients are weak and very warm air covers most of the continent. A large but diffuse upper-level low is placed between Austria, the Ukraine and Greece. A blocking anticyclone 
regenerates over N Scandinavia and deflects the polar jet to the far north. The subtropical jet stretches from Morocco to the Near East.

DISCUSSION

... from France into England ...

As the Atlantic upper-level trough slowly moves eastward, the S-erly flow increases over W Europe. A "Spanish plume" with steep lapse rates is advected across France into E England and overspreads a moist boundary layer. CAPE between 500 and 1000 J/kg will likely build over E England, overlapping with strong vertical wind shear (~15 m/s across the lowest 3 km). Even more CAPE is expected in N and central France, though under somewhat weaker shear (~10 m/s across the lowest 3 km).
A few non-severe and partly embedded thunderstorms may already be active in the morning along the approaching cold front over central England. Supported by synoptic lift from warm air advection and various travelling vorticity maxima, additional storm become likely in the afternoon at the cold front, at prefrontal convergence lines or sea breeze fronts in E England and N France. Convective initiation will be less frequent and will often await the evening or even night further south over central France towards the Massif Central.
Storms will organize into multi- and supercells before a growth into several clusters is expected in the evening. The severe weather risks shift from large hail in initiating stages to severe wind gusts and flash floods later on. Finally, one or two tornadoes are not ruled out in the sea breeze regimes where low-level shear is maximized, if these sea breezes penetrate far enough inland to become exposed to sufficient daytime heating.
Convection will gradually become elevated and weaken after sunset, and in general when it moves onto the North Sea.

... Belgium, Netherlands ...

The environment further ahead of the cold front will be hot and dry, yielding very large spreads between expected maximum temperatures up to 35C and dewpoints in the 10 to 15C range. Despite limited CAPE and weak vertical wind shear, strong evaporative cooling in downdrafts may create severe wind gusts under any storm that forms.
A similar environment was already in place on Thursday (cf the 12z soundings from Essen and Idar-Oberstein), when multiple severe to extreme downbursts occurred in Belgium and the Netherlands. Latest model runs emphasized the possibility of a similar scenario on Friday, hence the level 1 and level 2 are extended eastward.

Onweer/blikseminslag | Verwachtingen/waarschuwingen | Wind/storm (-schade)

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