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    Home / Editor's Pick /

    Trickier than you think - Why it's hard to pinpoint thunderstorms

09:36
27 May 2026

Trickier than you think
Why it's hard to pinpoint thunderstorms

Bright lightning bolt striking beneath dark storm clouds over a silhouetted landscape at night, illuminating the sky with blue-white flashes.
Lightning strikes the ground in Ivybridge, Devon. - © Weather & Radar Uploader

Mentioning a risk of thunderstorms in a forecast often comes with a mixture of feelings. Some of us love them, while others of us are more thankful when they miss our location.

When thunderstorms pop up in forecasts, most of us will check if they're nearby. Instead, finding a thunderstorm warning area with no pinpointed location where the thunderstorm will occur.

This is because locking down the location of a thunderstorm is actually rather difficult before it forms. The best way to explain why is the case is by using an analogy of a saucepan boiling some water.

When boiling water, you know that bubbles will eventually appear when the conditions are right, you just don’t know where they will appear.

This is similar to the prediction of thunderstorms. We can see an area of unstable conditions growing to aid the development of a thunderstorm. We just cannot pinpoint where the exact conditions will be to identify the specific location of the thunderstorm itself.

Once a thunderstorm has been established, we are able to use current weather observation data to update our forecasts to both keep track of the thunderstorm and predict where it will move.

Ryan Hathaway
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