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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.

INTRODUCTION TO TRAINING & LEARNING

Training and learning for weather- and crowd-related safety are mandatory requirements in outdoor festival contexts. In temporary, high-density environments that rely on rapidly assembled, often changing teams, structured competence building is an important mechanism that ensures that plans, thresholds, and procedures function under real operational pressure.

Weather plans that are not trained are theoretical documents.

Effective training for weather risk management at festivals is not about teaching meteorology in isolation. It is about enabling people to translate incomplete, evolving information into proportionate operational action. Weather-realted learning is iterative. One-off briefings do not create competence.

Training and education in a weather related context aims at building competence: the integrated combination of knowledge, skills, and attitudes required to perform safely in a defined context.

Especially when focussing on “weather” as a core topic for training and education,  training must explicitly address uncertainty. Weather forecasts are probabilistic, warnings are time-dependent, and impacts vary locally. Practitioners must learn how to work with imperfect information without defaulting to paralysis or overreaction.

The topic is sometimes underestimated in professional practice for several recurring reasons:

Other challenges in regard to training & education are:

Fragmented training across contractors and partners

Security, medical, production, and vendors receive separate, uncoordinated briefings; there is no joint view of who does what when evacuation or sheltering decisions are taken.

External agencies (police, fire, municipal services, meteorological service) are not integrated into exercises; interface frictions only become visible during real incidents.

No structured learning loop

When lessons are identified, they are not translated into updated training materials, checklists, or standard operating procedures, causing the same issues to recur across seasons.

Documentation and traceability gaps

Lack of consistent records on who has been trained in which modules, when, and for what roles, making it difficult to demonstrate compliance with standards and good practice.

Training certificates or sign‑in sheets do not reflect actual competence because attendance was symbolic or the content was misaligned with operational needs.

Training Framework and Methods

Effective weather training is role-specific, scenario-based, progressive and repeatable

Role-Specific Competence

Different roles require different depth and focus.

Generic awareness training cannot substitute for role-specific competence mapped directly to the safety management system and site-specific crowd plans.

Scenario-Based, Decision-Oriented Learning

Weather and crowd risks unfold as evolving scenarios, not isolated technical problems.
Scenario-based learning—tabletop exercises, case studies, simulated timelines—creates shared mental models of escalation, decision points, and consequences.

Training as a System Component

Training and Education are structural element of safety management, alongside policy, procedures, and resources. This includes:

What to be trained?

Several research fields underpin effective training and learning for weather‑related crowd and event safety:

Crowd dynamics and pedestrian movement
Empirical and modelling studies on density, flow rates, route choice, and evacuation dynamics inform training on how crowds respond to constraints, information, and environmental stressors such as weather. These insights guide practical elements such as route selection for drills and the design of steward positioning.

Human factors and decision‑making under uncertainty
Research from aviation, emergency management, and high‑reliability organisations shows how people interpret signals, manage workload, and coordinate decisions under time pressure and ambiguity. Applying these findings leads to training that emphasises simple mental models, clear roles, and robust communication patterns instead of complex, brittle procedures. ​

Applied meteorology and impact‑based warnings
The shift from purely hazard‑based to impact‑based weather warnings in Europe focuses attention on what weather will do to people, infrastructure, and services. Training must reflect this by teaching not only thresholds but also likely impacts on stages, ground conditions, access roads, medical demand, and crowd comfort.

This leads to a widespread content list for “weather-related training and education”. Which content is appropriate in what depth depends upon roles and levels of responsibility.

Examples of Training Levels & Formats

A Level-based training

Level 1 – Awareness Training

Target group: All staff, volunteers, contractors

Focus:

Format:

Goal: shared language and baseline awareness.

Level 2 – Functional Training

Target group: Supervisors, stewards, technical leads, medical teams

Focus:

Format:

Goal: correct execution of predefined measures.

Level 3 – Decision & Command Training

Target group: Event director, safety manager, operations control

Focus:

Format:

Goal: confident, defensible leadership decisions.

B Examples of different learning formats

Tabletop Exercises (TTX)

Tabletop exercises allow teams to:

They are particularly effective for weather scenarios, which are difficult to rehearse live.

Hand-Calculation Exercises

Weather affects crowd movement parameters and must be trained quantitatively.

Typical exercises include:

These exercises reinforce:

Communication Drills

Communication drills should test:

Good practice:

Communication is a skill, not an automatic outcome.

Staff Briefings and Micro-Training

Weather training should also be integrated into:

Short, focused inputs are effective when:

Summary

More information

  1. https://standards.iteh.ai/catalog/standards/cen/4a60c5d5-3cd2-4159-a376-35aa478267e9/en-13200-8-2017
  2. https://www.ticketfairy.com/blog/weather-ready-rehearsals-and-tabletop-drills-for-winter-festivals
  3. https://www.ticketfairy.com/blog/climate-proofing-your-festival-building-weather-resilience-into-event-planning
  4. https://riglab.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/en13200-8-2017.pdf
  5. https://www.dtn.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/eb_Managing_WxRisk_OutdoorEvents.pdf
  6. https://www.eventsafetyinstitute.com
  7. https://ukresilienceacademy.org/learn/crowd-and-event-safety/
  8. https://xtix.ai/blog/building-weather-disruption-contingency-plans-for-european-festivals
  9. https://actsafe.ca/crowd-management/
  10. https://mercury-training.com/c/15238.html
  11. https://www.fgsv-verlag.de/pub/media/pdf/172_E.v.pdf
  12. https://climate-adapt.eea.europa.eu/en/metadata/guidances/emergency-response-plan-in-the-event-of-extreme-weather-conditions
  13. https://rm.coe.int/annex-a-revised-2019/16809ecab3
  14. https://eventsafetyalliance.org/weather-planning-workshop/2025-esa-weather-safety-training
  15. https://www.storm-4.com/training/crowd-safety-risk-management-training/
  16. https://eventsafetyalliance.org/inperson-learning/crowd-safety-workshop
  17. https://training.safetyculture.com/course-collection/event-safety-training-courses/
  18. https://agile4training.com/course/managing-crowds-during-events-training-to-secure-crowds-using-dime-ice-model
  19. https://stcw.online/course/crowd-management-online-course/
  20. https://extendedstudies.ucsd.edu/osha/certificate-programs/event-safety