Request for Comment - Criteria for Tornadoes of XXXX articles[edit]

Should the set of criteria (four points) + the rare oddities exception, become the criteria for all Tornadoes of XXXX (ex. Tornadoes of 2023 & Tornadoes of 2024) articles?

The Weather Event Writer (Talk Page) 21:20, 13 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Criteria

Copy and pasted from WP:TornadoCriteria

For inclusion, the tornado or tornado outbreak must pass one of the following critiera:

  1. The individual tornado or a tornado during a tornado outbreak caused at least one injury or one death.
  2. The individual tornado or a tornado during a tornado outbreak was rated EF3, EF4, or EF5, and it occurred inside the United States.
  3. The individual tornado or a tornado during a tornado outbreak was rated F2, F3, F4, or F5 or IF2, IF2.5, IF3, IF4, or IF5 or EF2, EF3, EF4, or EF5, and it occurred in a country outside of the United States.
  4. A tornado outbreak which occurred outside the United States.

Rare oddities

Survey

@Tom94022: that discussion you linked was the beginning/figuring out what to put for the criteria, which is this page. There isn't two sets, just this one. Also, let me comment about International VS US. The US has 10x the amount of tornadoes than any other country. The US, in fact, has more tornadoes than the rest of the world combined. So a tornado outbreak, which requires 6+ tornadoes from the same storm system outside the US is on the uncommon side. Take Tornadoes of 2023 for instance, the U.S. has 1,350 tornadoes, which is several hundred more than Europe + China combined. The US had several tornado outbreaks, compared to the rest of the world, which had one. Basically, tornadoes outside the US are rarely in an outbreak form (more like solo mode or a small tornado family of 2-4), while in the US, outbreaks happen all the time. It is more based on regions and their respective intensities. An (E)F2 tornado in the US is common, with 129 happening just in 2023, while an F2 outside the US is rare, with only 20 tornadoes occurring at that intensity or higher in the rest of the world during 2023. That is why limiting what is included for the US is needed. Also, since there is list-based articles to document ones not included on this global-scale article, it works out. Hopefully that explains it.
Here is an article from CNN which explains it and says, "The US averages over 1,150 tornadoes every year. That’s more than any other country. In fact, it’s more than Canada, Australia and all European countries combined." Every point mentioned in the previous part is also easy to find through RS sources. Limiting to deaths would not work either, since not many tornadoes ever cause a death. Tornadoes of 2022, for instance, has 32 deaths worldwide. Limiting to just deaths would exclude even stand-alone notable tornado outbreak articles outside the US (October 2022 European tornado outbreak being an example). The current criteria is what was typically and almost always used for the lists anyway. WikiProject Weather has had several debates in the past, so this is just spelling out the criteria in plain words vs presumed through debates over the years. The Weather Event Writer (Talk Page) 18:38, 14 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe I am a dummy but I don't find any criteria on this page and it took me a while to find the ones I linked - so why doesn't someone post the criteria, link it or somehow make it visible to dummies like me. FWIW I understand the 10x situation, but I don't think that justifies the distinction. And I still suggest limiting inclusion to ones that cause death might help shorten the articles. Tom94022 (talk) 06:14, 15 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Tom94022:  Done! Just above the Survey section is now a section where the criteria was copy/pasted. The Weather Event Writer (Talk Page) 13:31, 15 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]