my-server
← Wiki

Particularly dangerous situation

In weather forecasting in the United States, "particularly dangerous situation" (PDS) is the wording used by the National Weather Service and the Storm Prediction Center to convey special urgency in watch or warning messages for unusually extreme and life-threatening severe weather. It is used in the format "This is a particularly dangerous situation..." at the discretion of the issuing forecaster. A watch or warning bearing the phrase is referred to as a PDS watch or PDS warning.

First used by the Storm Prediction Center (SPC), a national guidance center of the National Weather Service, for tornado watches, the phrase was later applied to other severe weather watches and warnings by the agency's regional forecast offices. It is most commonly used for major tornado outbreaks or long-lived, extreme derecho events, and has been used for non-convective weather hazards such as exceptional flash flooding, or a wildfire.

PDS watches and warnings are uncommon. From 1996 to 2005, the SPC issued an average of 24 per year, less than 3% of all watches. When a PDS watch is issued, there are often more PDS watches issued for the same weather system, even on the same day during major outbreaks, so the number of days per year that a PDS watch is issued is significantly lower.

Background

During the winter of 1981–82, the Severe Local Storms (SELS) unit switched to a more flexible method of issuing weather products. Ed Ferguson, Deputy Director of the National Severe Storms Forecast Center (NSSFC), suggested to Lead Forecaster Jack Hales that the guidance center could give more resolution to the tornado watch product. Hales suggested the PDS option to identify areas where, a few times each year, conditions are most likely to aid in the development of large and intense tornadoes. The first PDS tornado watch was issued by Robert H. Johns for the April 2, 1982 tornado outbreak across the southern and central Great Plains.

While historically applied only to severe thunderstorm, tornado and flash flood watches (i.e., severe local storm "polygonal" events), PDS wording could theoretically be applied to other types of weather watches (such as winter storm, high wind, hurricane, or fire weather watches) when an enhanced threat for such conditions exists. These watches have generally (but not always) been issued during a high risk or an upper-end moderate risk either of severe storms from the SPC's convective outlooks or of flash flooding from the Weather Prediction Center (WPC)'s excessive rainfall outlooks.

On April 24, 2011, the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Memphis, Tennessee, issued the first PDS flash flood watch to highlight the threat for widespread, significant, and potentially life-threatening flash flooding due to repeated rounds of severe thunderstorms.

On December 19, 2017, and August 3, 2018, the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Reno, Nevada, issued PDS red flag warnings to highlight the threat for potentially life-threatening fire danger due to strong gusty winds and low humidity.

Issuance

PDS flash flood watch

PDS flash flood watches were issued when there is a higher-than-normal risk of widespread, life-threatening flash flooding. These watches are issued by local NWS Weather Forecast Offices, not the Storm Prediction Center. This would eventually go onto be replaced by the flood watch in 2021.

Below is the first PDS flash flood watch, which was issued by the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 24, 2011, as mentioned above.

PDS flash flood warning

PDS flash flood warnings are issued when there is a higher than normal risk of widespread, life-threatening flash flooding. Like PDS flash flood watches, they are issued by the local NWS Weather Forecast Offices, rather than the Storm Prediction Center. Recently, they have been issued as PDS flash flood emergencies, most notably by the National Weather Service offices in Houston and Corpus Christi, Texas.

This strongly-worded flash flood emergency was issued on September 27, 2024, by the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Greenville–Spartanburg, South Carolina, in response to devastating flooding in western North Carolina caused by Hurricane Helene.

PDS flood watch

A PDS flood watch is issued by the National Weather Service when significant and widespread flooding is likely, and will cause a high threat to life and/or property.

The first known flood watch was issued in mid-February 2025 across parts of Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana, prompted by the February 2025 North American storm complex, which caused widespread catastrophic and deadly flooding across much of the area.

PDS high wind warning

PDS high wind warnings are issued by the National Weather Service when non-convective winds are expected to be especially damaging or dangerous to people and property, beyond what would be expected of a typical high wind warning.

The warning below was issued by the National Weather Service in Salt Lake City, Utah, on September 8, 2020, for an extreme downslope wind event in Salt Lake City and the northern Wasatch Front.

PDS red flag warning

PDS red flag warnings are issued by the National Weather Service to inform the public that there is an unusually high threat of wildland fire combustion, and rapid spread of wildfires, due to very dry fuels, very low humidity levels, and strong winds.

The PDS red flag warning below was issued by the National Weather Service in Reno, Nevada, on December 19, 2017.

On August 3, 2018, the National Weather Service in Reno, Nevada, issued another PDS red flag warning to communicate the threat of life-threatening fire danger due to strong gusty winds and low humidity.

On April 12, 2022, the National Weather Service in Norman, Oklahoma, issued a PDS red flag warning because of an extreme fire weather behavior (overlap of extremely dry fuels, humidity as low as 8 percent and wind gusting to 60 mph).

On January 7, 2025, during a destructive wildfire event affecting much of greater Los Angeles and surrounding areas, the National Weather Service in Los Angeles-Oxnard, California issued numerous PDS red flag warnings due to extreme winds and low humidity.

PDS severe thunderstorm watch

PDS severe thunderstorm watches are issued when there is a higher than normal risk of severe thunderstorm winds capable of major structural damage (in addition to large hail and perhaps a few isolated tornadoes), usually due to a strong and persistent derecho. These watches are very rare (accounting an average of only two each year), as the risk for tornadoes must remain low enough to not warrant a tornado watch (a normal tornado watch would be issued if the tornado risk is significant alongside the extreme wind threat).

This PDS severe thunderstorm watch shown below was issued by the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, on May 12, 2022, for a derecho in portions of Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and South Dakota.

PDS special marine warning

PDS Special marine warnings are issued by the National Weather Service to inform mariners of weather conditions that present a considerable threat to life and property.

On April 19, 2018, the Baltimore/Washington, D.C. forecast office upgraded a special marine warning to PDS status as a gust front approached Chesapeake Bay.

PDS special weather statement

PDS special weather statements are usually issued by the NWS for hazards that do not have a specific code of their own and pose an exceptionally high risk of damage and loss of life.

The PDS special weather statement below was issued by the National Weather Service in Buffalo, New York, on December 11, 2013, regarding extreme amounts of lake effect snow to impact the defined area. The same office issued multiple PDS Special Weather Statements for hurricane-force winds forecast to hit the Buffalo area on February 24, 2019.

PDS tornado watch

PDS tornado watches are issued when there is a significantly higher than normal risk of multiple EF2 or stronger tornadoes – especially those that are predicted to be long-track in nature, with path lengths of more than 20 miles – in the watch area (usually amounting to damage consistent with EF4 or EF5 tornadoes at maximum), in addition to including significant wind and hail damage. This enhanced wording in a Tornado Watch is meant to alert the public of the potential for very life-threatening severe weather. Under current criteria, such would be issued when the probability for significant tornadoes is 80% or greater. PDS Tornado Watches are often issued on high-risk days for severe weather, though they have been issued on high-end moderate risk days.

The PDS tornado watch shown below was issued on March 15 during the Tornado outbreak of March 13-16, 2025. The watch also includes >95/95 tornado probabilities

PDS tornado warning

PDS tornado warnings are tornado warnings that use the considerable damage-threat category within the National Weather Service's impact-based warning framework. They are issued in rare situations when there is a considerable threat to life and property due to a strong, ongoing tornado. When this category is used, the warning includes the line "This is a PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION. TAKE COVER NOW!" Within this framework, the higher catastrophic category is used for a tornado emergency, which is reserved for exceedingly rare situations involving a severe threat to human life and catastrophic damage. PDS tornado warnings are issued by local National Weather Service forecast offices.

Below is an example of a PDS Tornado Warning, issued for the 2025 Somerset–London tornado on May 16, 2025.

PDS wind chill/extreme cold warning

PDS extreme cold warnings are issued when there is an enhanced risk of life-threatening frost bite and hypothermia due to extremely low wind chills. These warnings are issued by the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Offices rather than the Storm Prediction Center.

The PDS extreme cold warning (then known as a wind chill warning) shown below was issued by the National Weather Service in the Twin Cities on January 5, 2014.

Other watches and warnings

While the use of PDS wording for other types of watches and warnings has not been used, PDS wording could theoretically be applied to any kind of watch or warning to alert the public to weather events where there exists an increased risk of loss of life or widespread damage to property. Such situations could include PDS watches or warnings for blizzards, ice storms, or extreme heat.

References

External links