Mississippi is seeing more tornadoes, hail and flooding. Here’s why

Blinding rain, hail, tornadoes and periods of bitter cold in Mississippi; if you feel these events are happening more often, well, you’re right. Mississippi’s wild weather is just getting wilder.

So, why is this happening? It boils down to a changing climate.

“First, with climate change and some local issues, we’ve got a stronger jet stream, said Jaimie Dyer, Mississippi State University professor of meteorology and climatology. “You get stronger cold fronts coming down and they cause stronger storms. So, we’re getting more of these extremes.”

Dyer said rising global temperatures are actually moving the jet stream farther north, but at the same time it’s causing a wave that dips down into the Southeast more frequently in the spring and fall months. Those changes are affecting our weather patterns.

“During the warmer months the jet stream is moving farther north, which leaves the southeast U.S. with more tropical conditions, including higher temperatures and humidity levels,” Dyer said. “This then leads to more energy available for scattered thunderstorms, we call them airmass thunderstorms, which is what we’ve been seeing the past few days.”

And some of that energy produces tornadoes such as those that swept through Mississippi last month.

A woman salvages personal belongings from a damaged home in Moss Point on Tuesday, June 20, 2023, after a tornado tore through the town on Monday.
A woman salvages personal belongings from a damaged home in Moss Point on Tuesday, June 20, 2023, after a tornado tore through the town on Monday.

Mississippi tornadoes between 1950 and 2022

According to NOAA, there were 3,150 tornadoes reported in Mississippi between 1950 and 2022 and when broken down by years, it is clear the frequency of them is increasing.

  • Between 1950 and 1970, there wasn’t a year with 50 or more tornadoes reported and in six years fewer than 10 were reported.

  • Between 2002 and 2022, there were more than 50 tornadoes reported during 16 years.

  • Between 2002 and 2022, there were more than 100 tornadoes reported during six years.

  • Between 2019 and 2022, there were three years with more than 100 tornadoes reported including the record 181 in 2022.

Teary-eyed Moss Point picks up the pieces after tornado. ‘It’s like a bomb went off.’

Why are there more tornadoes being recorded? Dyer said there are a few reasons. Part of it is there are more people living with technology in Mississippi, so more tornadoes are reported. Another reason is better technology to detect them. Then there is the simple matter of having an increased number of storms capable of producing tornadoes.

“So, you’re getting stronger storms due to climate change and everything that goes with that,” Dyer said.

Historic Black church built in 1874 withstood Camille and Katrina. Then came a MS tornado.

A couple of items that go with that are heavier rains and increased risk of hail.

Increased flooding and hail in Mississippi

Dyer said measuring the frequency of hail events isn’t an exact science. He explained it can be difficult to detect on radar at times. However, with more strong storms capable of producing hail such as one that pelted parts of Copiah County with hail larger than golf balls last month, it just makes sense it’s happening more frequently.

“From my perspective, if we’re getting more extreme storms then we’re getting more hail,” Dyer said.

Rain is also becoming more of an issue. Dyer said it’s not that Mississippi is seeing higher annual rainfall totals, it’s how we receive it.

Dyer said Mississippi is seeing fewer rains, but when it rains, it pours and causes flooding, overwhelmed storm drain systems and increased river and agricultural land erosion.

“We’re getting less frequent events, but when we get it, we get it harder,” Dyer said.

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