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'Derechos,' or fierce windstorms, are becoming regulars in the Midwest

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

A huge storm system has recently punished the central and southern parts of the country. It's the type of severe weather that can be common in the Midwest and the Plains. A year ago, the fierce winds of a derecho were part of the storms that killed at least five people and devastated neighborhoods in the region. Now scientists are working to determine what future derechos could look like. Iowa Public Radio's Katie Peikes reports.

KATIE PEIKES, BYLINE: December 15, 2021, was an unseasonably warm day - record highs in the 70s in some parts of Iowa - when a derecho blew through. The widespread, long-lived windstorm hit Matt Thompson's (ph) seed and fertilizer application business more than 70 miles northwest of Des Moines.

MATT THOMPSON: There was a building there. You can see the pad still sitting there, the gravel. That's where one of the buildings was.

PEIKES: Lost Grove Ag Services lost five of its six buildings. Thompson recalls getting to the business early the next morning to survey the damage.

THOMPSON: And when the sun came up, it was - we didn't know what we were going to do. It was pretty devastating to see. It was unbelievable. I'll never forget that.

PEIKES: This derecho was unique, the first recorded in December anywhere in the U.S. Wind gusts exceeded 80 miles per hour. The straight line winds and tornadoes that accompanied left nearly $2 billion in damage stretching from Kansas to Michigan. Iowa in particular has been caught in the crosshairs of derechos over the last couple of years.

Bill Gallus is a meteorology professor at Iowa State University. He says derechos thrive on warm, humid air in the atmosphere's lower levels, creating thunderstorms, something the Midwest often has.

BILL GALLUS: Those thunderstorms are able to tap into very strong winds happening higher up in the atmosphere, even up toward the jet stream, so that they can bring those strong winds down to the ground. That is what happened in the recent December 2021 derecho in the Midwest.

PEIKES: There isn't a lot of research on derechos, so scientists say it's hard to know how they'll fare in a warming earth. Gallus says there's more energy in the atmosphere as it warms, and that could pave the way for more powerful and more frequent derechos. But scientists can't say for sure, and some attribute the uncertainty to the fact that there's no official database for derecho like there is for hurricanes or tornadoes where they can look for historic trends. That's something the National Weather Service is working on. Meteorologist Matthew Elliott says derechos have no formal definition.

MATTHEW ELLIOTT: When you hear the word derecho, it's got to trigger something. It's got to trigger that this is the worst windstorm that I'm going to see.

PEIKES: Once they have a label and better data, Elliott says it'll make forecasting derechos easier and will give people more warning to get to safety. The National Weather Service has improved the alert system. That's after a highly destructive derecho hit the Midwest back in August 2020, killing four people. Now when a severe thunderstorm warning is issued with strong winds of at least 80 miles per hour, people get an alert on their phones. But Walker Ashley, a disaster geographer at Northern Illinois University, says more should be done with urban planning and building codes.

WALKER ASHLEY: We build at the bare minimum standards in this country, and that has all sorts of consequences, from heating costs to damage within extreme damaging wind events.

PEIKES: After all, Ashley says, as cities grow and sprawl out, they're putting more people in harm's way of extreme weather like derechos.

For NPR News, I'm Katie Peikes in Ames, Iowa. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Katie Peikes came to Delaware from Logan, Utah, where she worked as a municipal government reporter for a newspaper while simultaneously serving as a correspondent for Utah Public Radio covering science, technology, transportation and features. She has also contributed as an intern to other member stations including WNPR News in Hartford, Connecticut and WDIY in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Her interest in science and technology news comes from the opportunities she had to cover environmental stories in Utah. She has published numerous pieces on Cache County’s air quality, water quality, waste management and solar energy.