This text is part of the Weather Preparedness & Resilience Toolbox developed by the YOUROPE Event Safety (YES) Group within YOUROPE’s 3F project (Future-Fit Festivals). It is aimed at everyone involved in planning, building, and operating open-air events. It helps festivals and other outdoor events become truly weather-ready by offering both practical and research-based resources as well as background information on weather and climate. Learn how to design safer and more weather-resilient outdoor events.
Weather Toolbox – Weather Hazard Awareness – Special Aspects
Weather Hazard Awareness: What are we dealing with?
Special Weather Issues
Weather hazard awareness for events must go beyond “rain or shine” thinking and focus on how multiple, interacting weather and environmental factors affect crowd safety, infrastructure, and decision‑making. Special weather issues such as compound storms, microclimates, heat stress, and smoke or dust can quickly turn a manageable situation into a critical one if they are not anticipated in planning and monitoring.
Modern weather events increasingly present as compound or multi‑hazard situations, where several hazards (for example strong wind, heavy rain, lightning, and sometimes hail) occur at the same time or in rapid succession. These compound events usually have non‑linear impacts: drainage is overwhelmed faster, structures reach their tolerance limits sooner, and crowd movement degrades more quickly than in single‑hazard scenarios.
For event and crowd managers this means:
- Planning must assume overlapping hazards, not isolated “rain only” or “wind only” scenarios.
- Thresholds and trigger points (e.g. for evacuation, stage shutdown, admission stops) should be defined for combined conditions such as “wind + saturated ground” or “rain + lightning within 10 km”.
- Exercises and case reviews should specifically include scenarios where one storm is followed by another or where secondary impacts (flash flooding, mud, power failure) appear after the main cell has passed.
1 Microclimates
Microclimates are localised atmospheric conditions that differ from the wider regional forecast due to terrain, vegetation, water bodies, and built structures. In urban or complex venues, building geometry, canyons, tree lines and waterfronts can create pockets of higher wind speeds, stagnant hot air, fog formation, or sharp temperature contrasts over very short distances.
Key implications for event sites:
- Wind and gusts: Corners between buildings, gaps in tree lines, or funnel‑shaped valleys can accelerate wind, increasing the load on stages, tents, inflatables and temporary signage beyond what regional forecasts suggest.
- Thermal comfort and crowd flow: Shaded streets, exposed plazas and waterfront promenades can differ by more than 10 °C in perceived thermal load, influencing where people cluster, how long they dwell, and which escape routes they choose.
2 Heat stress conditions
Heat stress is not defined by temperature alone but by the combination of air temperature, humidity, radiant exposure (direct sun and hot surfaces) and wind, as captured in indices such as the Universal Thermal Climate Index. In Europe, the number of days with extreme heat stress has risen sharply, and heat is now considered one of the most serious climate‑related threats to public health, especially in cities and during mass gatherings.
For crowd and event safety this means
- Physiological risk escalates when high temperature coincides with high humidity and low wind, because the human body’s ability to cool via sweating is reduced.
- Mass gatherings show a clear relationship between increasing ambient temperature and rising incidence of heat‑related illness, particularly among vulnerable groups and in dense standing crowds.
- Effective mitigation includes providing shade and cooled areas, ensuring sufficient potable water, adapting scheduling (e.g. avoiding peak afternoon exposure), and using real‑time heat stress or thermal comfort indices rather than temperature alone to trigger protective actions.
3 Smoke, dust and aerosols
Smoke, dust and other aerosols are special hazards because they primarily affect air quality and visibility rather than causing direct mechanical damage, yet they significantly impact health and operational safety. Sources include regional events such as wildfires or long‑range Saharan dust transport, as well as local contributors like nearby traffic, construction, demolition works, fireworks and pyrotechnic‑heavy performances.
Key risks are:
- Health impacts: Fine particulate matter in smoke and dust penetrates deep into the lungs, aggravating asthma, cardiovascular disease and other respiratory conditions, and can cause acute symptoms such as coughing, eye irritation and shortness of breath in otherwise healthy people.
- Operational impacts: Reduced visibility affects crowd navigation, vehicle movements, helicopter operations and the ability of stewards and medical teams to observe early signs of distress in dense crowds.
To handle these special weather issues effectively, event risk management must shift from single‑trigger thinking to a layered, micro‑scale approach. This includes integrating compound hazard scenarios into risk assessments, designing site layouts around microclimate hotspots, implementing heat‑aware crowd services, and adding air‑quality monitoring and response thresholds to operational plans.
More information
- https://blog.aem.eco/spring-into-action-preparing-outdoor-venues-for-seasonal-weather-risk
- https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19407963.2024.2393362
- https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9013542/
- https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanplh/article/PIIS2542-5196(24)00161-X/fulltext
- https://zcralliance.org/blogs/compound-climate-events/
- https://www.alpine-space.eu/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/ADAPTNOW_Topic-Brief-4-Extreme-Coumpound-and-Cascading-Events.pdf
- https://eventstaff.com/blog/outdoor-event-staffing-how-to-plan-for-weather-risks
- https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5854744/
- https://www.arc.ed.tum.de/en/klima/forschung/abgeschlossene-forschungsprojekte/microclimate-in-urban-space/
- https://jsalutogenic.com/jsa/article/download/25/18
- https://caadria2021.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/caadria2021_064.pdf
- https://www.cheese-rolling.co.uk/files/health_and_safety/2009_hse_review_on_safety_at_outdoor_events_rr790.pdf
- https://www.lemonde.fr/en/europe/article/2024/04/22/europe-suffered-record-number-of-extreme-heat-stress-days-in-2023-according-to-report_6669124_143.html
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-025-02480-1
- https://tsi.com/emergency-response-and-law-enforcement/learn/understanding-aerosol-and-dust-exposure-in-emergency-response
- https://sirc.ca/articles/clearing-the-air-around-air-quality-and-outdoor-sport-safety/
- https://www.copernicus.eu/en/news/news/observer-air-quality-challenges-2025-europes-summer-smoke-dust-and-ozone
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0269749123006140
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0925753525002619
