
Severe Geomagnetic Storm Watch Issued for June, May Threaten Infrastructure
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A severe geomagnetic storm watch issued by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is in effect for June 2, with the agency warning that the powerful solar event could disrupt critical infrastructure.
Shawn Dahl, a space weather forecaster at NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC), told Newsweek in an email Saturday: "We are already taking measures to notify FEMA [Federal Emergency Management Agency] for their awareness only at this time" so the agency can make "preparation[s] to deal with and manage geomagnetic induced currents that will likely develop in high voltage transmission lines," potentiallyimpacting the nation's power grid.
Newsweek has reached out to FEMA's press team for comment via email on Saturday.
Why It Matters
Geomagnetic storms are classified by the NOAA on a scale of G1 (minor) to G5 (extreme), with G5 being the most powerful and least common.
The fluctuations in our planet's magnetic field during a geomagnetic storm create electric fields on the Earth's surface. When these electric fields interact with conductive materials like rock, soil or water, they induce electrical currents in the ground.
These currents, coupled with the electric fields in the ground, can lead to geomagnetically induced currents (GICs), which can travel through power grid systems. These GICs overload transformers and other electrical components, leading to potential damage or large-scale power outages.
Aurora borealis, or northern lights, shine in the sky on August 12, 2024, in Mohe, China.
Aurora borealis, or northern lights, shine in the sky on August 12, 2024, in Mohe, China.
VCG/VCG via AP
What To Know
On Saturday, NOAA issued a geomagnetic storm watch with a strong (G3) alert for June 1, a severe (G4) alert for June 2 and a moderate (G2) alert for June 4.
The warning comes after "a powerful coronal mass ejection (CME) erupted from the Sun" on May 30. It is expected to arrive at Earth on Sunday, June 1. CME is an "eruption of solar material and magnetic fields," according to NOAA.
The warning levels are "our best guesses" at the moment, Dahl told Newsweek, adding that "essentially we have to wait until the CME arrives 1 million miles from Earth at the DSCOVR/ACE spacecraft solar wind observatories to know exactly what the CME structure and magnetic strength and orientation actually are."
CME arrival at Earth is anticipated and a G4 Watch is now in effect for 2 Jun. CME arrival later on 1 Jun could lead to G3, with G4 potential increased on 2 Jun, and as CME passage weakens, G1-G2 still possible on 3 Jun. Full story at https://t.co/1XbPMluPTX pic.twitter.com/XWAb6H77Kw — NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (@NWSSWPC) May 31, 2025
He added that if the magnetic field of the CME is "strong and oriented orientated opposite Earth, we are quite confident in G3-G4 levels being reached," whereas if it is not than the severity becomes less likely.
The effects of a geomagnetic storm can be significant, with NOAA's watch stating, "detrimental impacts to some of our critical infrastructure technologies are possible, but mitigation is possible." The infrastructure can be impacted by overload transformers, potentially causing temporary blackouts of the power grid, or interfering with satellites communications and GPS disruptions, among others.
In 1989, a powerful CME caused a geomagnetic storm that knocked out the Hydro-Québec power grid in Canada, leaving millions of people without electricity for hours.
What People Are Saying
Matthew Cappucci, an atmospheric scientist wrote on X, formerly Twitter, on Saturday: "A rare 'G4' geomagnetic watch has been hoisted by the Space Weather Prediction Center in Boulder, Colorado – indicating they are unusually confident in direct Earth impacts."
My Radar Weather posted on X Saturday: "This is a BIG deal! A 'severe' geomagnetic storm is coming – and LOTS of Americans might get to see the aurora borealis!"
Dr. Tamitha Skov, a space weather physicist, wrote on X Saturday: "Our Sun finally aims straight for Earth! NASA model predictions show a very fast #solarstorm travelling near 1000 km/s that could hit Earth by midday June 1. A slower storm ahead might cause a slight traffic delay, but G4-levels by June 2 are possible. This means #aurora may be visible deep into mid-latitudes. Considering we expect big flares to continue on Earth's dayside over the next few days, this means both the dayside and nightside radio bands will remain noisy, with periodic disruptions."
What Happens Next?
Geomagnetic storms can make aurora borealis, or the northern lights, more visible by disrupting the Earth's magnetic fields. NOAA says the aurora may be visible for the northern half of the country, as well as other sites.
The SWPC will continue updating information about the solar event throughout the day and leading up to its expected impact.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Camp Mystic boss did not evacuate children until hour after first flood warning
The owner of Camp Mystic has been accused of failing to evacuate campers until an hour after the first official alert warning of oncoming catastrophic Texas floods. Richard 'Dick' Eastland, the camp's executive director, did not immediately order an evacuation after the first text notification from the National Weather Service on July 4, the Washington Post reported. Eastland died trying to save girls from the devastating flooding, which claimed the lives of 27 campers and counsellors. At least 130 people have died in total. Cabins of some of the youngest girls staying in the camp just off the Guadalupe River were washed away in a matter of minutes. The camp is situated on the banks of the Guadalupe River, a well-studied, high-risk flood zone, according to mapped data from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema). Some of the cabins were located in what is known as 'the floodway', with some low-lying cabins located on the 'flats' – just 225ft from the river bank. On the night of the disaster, the first 'life-threatening' flash flood alert from the National Weather Service was issued to all Kerr County residents in Texas at approximately 1.14am. The warning, which did not include an evacuation order, 'came fast' Richard Eastland Jr, Dick Eastland's son, told the newspaper. Eastland immediately notified some adults at the camp via walkie talkie, and ordered them to 'assess the situation' as it unfolded, according to the Washington Post. The camp's loud speaker system ran on electricity and was unusable during the chaos that followed. The girls staying at Camp Mystic were also generally not allowed access to their phones or other electronic devices, per 2025 summer policies and procedures. Eastland waited until 2.30am to begin evacuating campers, his family reportedly told the newspaper in a statement. He later died trying to evacuate the youngest campers from the scene. Counsellors in the cabins closest to the river had to deal with the unfolding tragedy as the river swelled some 26ft in the space of 45 minutes. Camp Mystic's Bubble Inn cabin, which was located less than 500ft from the river, was quickly swept away. No survivors have been reported. Jeff Carr, the Eastland family spokesman, told the newspaper that the family would be taking time to process the tragedy before making further comments. 'It will be important to go through this process and avoid sharing information on a piecemeal basis,' he said. Dick and Tweety Eastland are the third generation to own and run the Christian all-girls camp, which has remained in their family since 1939, according to the camp's website. It has a long history of flooding, according to reports. In 1987, following the deaths of 10 children at a nearby camp, Dick Eastland successfully pushed for a new flood warning system to be installed. However the system was said to have been shut down in 1999 as it had become 'unreliable' due to lack of repair and maintenance, local media reported. Kerr County officials have come under fire for their failure to install a new flood warning system in the area, having suggested such a measure would be too 'extravagant'. In a tribute to Dick Eastland on social media, George Eastland, his grandson, said: 'If he wasn't going to die of natural causes, this was the only other way—saving the girls that he so loved and cared for.' He added: 'Although he no longer walks this earth, his impact will never fade in the lives he touched.' Further heavy rain in Texas on Sunday temporarily paused the week-long search for victims, as storms damaged homes, stranded motorists and put some residents under evacuation orders. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.


CBS News
4 hours ago
- CBS News
FEMA's flood maps often miss dangerous flash flood risks, leaving homeowners unprepared
Jeremy Porter is a professor of quantitative methods in the social sciences at the City University of New York. Deadly and destructive flash flooding in Texas and several other states in July 2025 is raising questions about the nation's flood maps and their ability to ensure that communities and homeowners can prepare for rising risks. The same region of Texas Hill Country where a flash flood on July 4 killed more than 130 people was hit again with downpours a week later, forcing searchers to temporarily pause their efforts to find missing victims. Other states including New Mexico, Oklahoma, Vermont and Iowa also saw flash flood damage in July. The U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's flood maps are intended to be the nation's primary tool for identifying flood risks. Originally developed in the 1970s to support the National Flood Insurance Program, these maps, known as Flood Insurance Rate Maps, or FIRMs, are used to determine where flood insurance is required for federally backed mortgages, to inform local building codes and land-use decisions, and to guide flood plain management strategies. In theory, the maps enable homeowners, businesses and local officials to understand their flood risk and take appropriate steps to prepare and mitigate potential losses. But while FEMA has improved the accuracy and accessibility of the maps over time with better data, digital tools and community input, the maps still don't capture everything — including the changing climate. There are areas of the country that flood, some regularly, that don't show up on the maps as at risk. I study flood-risk mapping as a university-based researcher and at First Street, an organization created to quantify and communicate climate risk. In a 2023 assessment using newly modeled flood zones with climate-adjusted precipitation records, we found that more than twice as many properties across the country were at risk of a 100-year flood than the FEMA maps identified. Even in places where the FEMA maps identified a flood risk, we found that the federal mapping process, its overreliance on historical data, and political influence over the updating of maps can lead to maps that don't fully represent an area's risk. What FEMA flood maps miss FEMA's maps are essential tools for identifying flood risks, but they have significant gaps that limit their effectiveness. One major limitation is that they don't consider flooding driven by intense bursts of rain. The maps primarily focus on river channels and coastal flooding, largely excluding the risk of flash flooding, particularly along smaller waterways such as streams, creeks and tributaries. This limitation has become more important in recent years due to climate change. Rising global temperatures can result in more frequent extreme downpours, leaving more areas vulnerable to flooding, yet unmapped by FEMA. For example, when flooding from Hurricane Helene hit unmapped areas around Asheville, North Carolina, in 2024, it caused a huge amount of uninsured damage to properties. Even in areas that are mapped, like the Camp Mystic site in Kerr County, Texas, that was hit by a deadly flash flood on July 4, 2025, the maps may underestimate their risk because of a reliance on historic data and outdated risk assessments. Political influence can fuel long delays Additionally, FEMA's mapping process is often shaped by political pressures. Local governments and developers sometimes fight to avoid high-risk designations to avoid insurance mandates or restrictions on development, leading to maps that may understate actual risks and leave residents unaware of their true exposure. An example is New York City's appeal of a 2015 FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps update. The delay in resolving the city's concerns has left it with maps that are roughly 20 years old, and the current mapping project is tied up in legal red tape. On average, it takes five to seven years to develop and implement a new FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Map. As a result, many maps across the U.S. are significantly out of date, often failing to reflect current land use, urban development or evolving flood risks from extreme weather. This delay directly affects building codes and infrastructure planning, as local governments rely on these maps to guide construction standards, development approvals and flood mitigation projects. Ultimately, outdated maps can lead to underestimating flood risks and allowing vulnerable structures to be built in areas that face growing flood threats. How technology advances can help New advances in satellite imaging, rainfall modeling and high-resolution lidar, which is similar to radar but uses light, make it possible to create faster, more accurate flood maps that capture risks from extreme rainfall and flash flooding. However, fully integrating these tools requires significant federal investment. Congress controls FEMA's mapping budget and sets the legal framework for how maps are created. For years, updating the flood maps has been an unpopular topic among many publicly elected officials, because new flood designations can trigger stricter building codes, higher insurance costs and development restrictions. In recent years, the rise of climate risk analytics models and private flood risk data have allowed the real estate, finance and insurance industries to rely less on FEMA's maps. These new models incorporate forward-looking climate data, including projections of extreme rainfall, sea-level rise and changing storm patterns — factors FEMA's maps generally exclude. Real estate portals like Zillow, Redfin, and now provide property-level flood risk scores that consider both historical flooding and future climate projections. The models they use identify risks for many properties that FEMA maps don't, highlighting hidden vulnerabilities in communities across the United States. Research shows that the availability, and accessibility, of climate data on these sites has started driving property-buying decisions that increasingly take climate change into account. Implications for the future As homebuyers understand more about a property's flood risks, that may shift the desirability of some locations over time. Those shifts will have implications for property valuations, community tax-revenue assessments, population migration patterns and a slew of other considerations. However, while these may feel like changes being brought on by new data, the risk was already there. What is changing is people's awareness. The federal government has an important role to play in ensuring that accurate risk assessments are available to communities and Americans everywhere. As better tools and models evolve for assessing risk evolve, FEMA's risk maps need to evolve, too.


CBS News
5 hours ago
- CBS News
Watch live: Gov. Abbott gives update on response to deadly flooding in Central Texas
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott will give an update on the response to the deadly flooding in Central Texas after receiving an update from first responders Monday afternoon. How to watch Abbott's news conference: Note: Streaming plans are subject to change Additional Central Texas counties added to federal disaster declaration Abbott also announced on Monday that the federal government has updated President Donald Trump's disaster declaration to include Burnet, Llano, Mason, McCulloch, and Tom Green counties for the Federal Emergency Management Agency's Public Assistance program. "President Trump's approval of my request to add more counties to his disaster declaration is another critical step to get Texans the support they need to recover," Abbott said. "Burnet, Llano, Mason, McCulloch, and Tom Green counties are now eligible for crucial public assistance to rebuild. Texas continues to work around-the-clock to help every impacted community heal and rebuild." Qualifying Texans in the following counties remain eligible for FEMA's Individual Assistance program: Burnet, Kerr, San Saba, Tom Green, Travis, and Williamson. Texans can apply for FEMA disaster assistance online at or by calling 800-621-3362. Abbott activates state emergency response resources as more storms threaten Central Texas One week after severe flooding devastated Central Texas, on Friday, Abbott activated state emergency response resources in anticipation of more severe weather and potential flash flooding across Texas this weekend. "Texas continues to stand ready to deploy all necessary resources to support Texans as severe storms move across our state," Abbott said in a news release. The governor said swiftwater rescue boat squads from Texas A&M Task Force 1 have been deployed to assist local storm response efforts, complementing ongoing flood response and recovery operations throughout the state. Officials ordered volunteer crews to temporarily suspend search operations near the river in Kerr County on Monday as the area hit hardest by catastrophic flash flooding on July 4 faced a renewed flood threat. Search and recovery efforts were initially paused early Sunday and later resumed, although officials continued to warn of ongoing flooding threats.