


Severe Storm Outlook Narrative (AC)
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
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710 ACUS01 KWNS 200536 SWODY1 SPC AC 200534 Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1234 AM CDT Wed Aug 20 2025 Valid 201200Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TODAY ACROSS THE WESTERN AND CENTRAL GULF COAST STATES AND THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER VICINITY OF NORTH DAKOTA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered thunderstorms developing this afternoon and evening across the western and central Gulf Coast states may pose a risk for localized potentially damaging wind gusts. Otherwise, there appears some risk for an isolated severe thunderstorm or two across parts of northern North Dakota. ...Discussion... Models indicate that a prominent mid/upper high will be maintained over the Four Corners vicinity through this period. However, initially amplified ridging extending to its north, as far as the Canadian Prairies, appears likely to become suppressed southeastward toward the central international border vicinity, as a significant short wave perturbation progresses east of the Canadian Rockies into Prairies by late tonight. It appears that this may be accompanied by weak cyclogenesis across southern Saskatchewan toward the central Saskatchewan/Manitoba border vicinity, with a trailing cold front advancing across the Montana international border by late tonight. At the same time, an increasingly sheared perturbation will continue progressing through weak larger-scale mid-level troughing digging across the Northeast, and southeastward around the periphery of the high, across the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and southern Great Plains. To the southeast of this feature, Hurricane Erin is forecast to turn slowly north-northeastward, offshore of the southern through middle Atlantic Seaboard. ...Gulf Coast States... A diffuse surface frontal zone, reinforced in segments by convective outflow, will continue slowly southward ahead of the mid-level shear axis, likely reaching portions of central Texas through Louisiana and central/northern Mississippi and Alabama by mid to late afternoon. Along and ahead of this front, a corridor of stronger heating of a seasonably moist boundary layer, perhaps still coincident with a residual plume of relatively steep lower/mid-tropospheric lapse rates, may continue to contribute to thermodynamic profiles supportive of localized downbursts and gusty winds on convectively generated surface cold pools. It is not clear that the severe threat will be any more widespread than the sparse coverage of preceding days, but it may perhaps be marginally sufficient to justify 5 percent severe wind probabilities. ...North Dakota... Models indicate that a narrow corridor of moderate to large potential instability may develop along/ahead of the surface cold front, a pre-frontal surface trough and developing warm frontal zone across parts of the Dakotas into eastern Saskatchewan by late this afternoon. However, beneath the nose of a plume of warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, mid/upper support for the initiation of boundary-layer based thunderstorm development is forecast to generally remain to the north of the international border. While the risk for severe thunderstorms appears largely conditional, guidance does indicate that a weak surface low may develop within the pre-frontal troughing and provide a potential focus for convective development across northwestern North Dakota late this afternoon and evening. If this forcing, coupled with the approach of convective temperatures, is sufficient to overcome the mid-level inhibition, forecast soundings indicate the environment will be conducive to supercell development. ..Kerr/Lyons.. 08/20/2025 $$