After years of work, NASA has finally pinned down some firm data on lightning storms.
After years of work, NASA has finally pinned down some firm data on lightning storms. (Photo: Otto du Plessis/iStock)

The World’s 10 Biggest Lightning Hot Spots

NASA crunched the numbers on 16 years of lightning strike data

After years of work, NASA has finally pinned down some firm data on lightning storms.
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Richard Kithil, head of the National Lightning Safety Institute, says lighting has its own agenda. “It is entirely capricious, random, and unpredictable. Man's attempts to fit lightning into a convenient box, with codes and standards to describe its behavior, are a best guess.”
 
Kithil may be right, but after years of work, NASA has finally pinned down some firm data on lightning storms. The information comes from a particularly unlikely source—a weather satellite launched in 1997 with a supposed three-year lifetime. But NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission Lightning Imaging Sensor didn’t quit in 2000 and instead provided researchers at the space agency with 16 years of data to analyze. In an upcoming paper in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, the team describes crunching the data and figuring out which parts of the earth see the most lightning flashes each year.
 
“Better understanding of lightning activity around the world enables policy makers, government agencies, and other stakeholders to make more informed decisions related to weather and climate,” says the Lightning Imaging Sensor’s project scientist, Richard Blakeslee. To that end, NASA is preparing to launch another lightning mapper aboard a 20-year climate-observation tool this October.
 
Until then, this data represents the best knowledge we have about lightning on earth. Here are the world’s 10 biggest lightning hot spots. 

(Fernando Flores)

1. Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela

232.52 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

This brackish bay on the Caribbean is the kind of place that makes you believe in an angry Zeus. The mammoth body of water—it would be South America’s biggest lake if not for a tiny inlet—is the perfect place for lightning strikes, with storms almost nightly. When the warm air off the lake meets the cool winds from the Andes, it sets off what locals call the Never-Ending Storm of Catatumbo. The storms are so dramatic, they’ve been used by ships for navigation for centuries and locals operate tour boats to offer visitors prime views of the show.
 
“One of the most interesting aspects was to discover that the place with the most lightning on Earth is over water, and during the night, opposing the general behavior of more thunderstorm development during the afternoon and over land,” Rachel Albrecht, a researcher at the University of São Paulo and the paper’s lead author, told the American Meteorological Society.

2. Kabare, Democratic Republic of Congo 

205.31 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Of the 500 most lightning prone spots in the world, Africa leads the pack with 283 separate areas, and the Great Lakes Region of Africa—home to Kabare—is an epicenter of lightning activity. Asia comes in with 87, followed by South America at 67 and North America with a measly 53. Orangetree Florida, near the everglades, is the most struck part of the U.S., though it ranks just 122nd on the global list.

(Roberto Serratore/iStock)

3. Kampene, Democratic Republic of Congo 

176.71 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Myth: Lightning never strikes the same place twice. The Empire State Building, for example, gets struck about 20 times a year. And parts of Kampene, in Africa’s Great Lakes Region, get hit all the time.

4. Caceres, Colombia

172.29 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Caceras, on the Cauca River, sees more lightning than any other part of Colombia.

(Dan Lieberman/iStock)

5. Sake, Democratic Republic of Congo 

143.21 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Africa has six of NASA’s top ten hot spots, and the majority of them are near Lake Kivu, in between the Congo and Rwanda—like Sake—and the other massive lakes along the East African Rift Valley.

6. Dagar, Pakistan

143.11 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Dagar, a mountainous part of Pakistan near the Afghan border, sees so many thunderstorms because it sits at the intersection of the westernmost Himalaya and the Indus River plain.

(Otto du Plessis/iStock)

7. El Tarra, Colombia 

138.61 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

At any given time, there are about 2,000 thunderstorms raging across the globe and 100 lightning strikes to earth per second, according to the NLSI. Lightning is more common at higher altitudes and near the equator, which explains why Colombia’s El Tarra is number seven on the list.

8. Nguti, Cameroon 

129.58 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Nguti, according to the paper’s authors, sees so many thunderstorms because consistent cool sea breezes from the nearby Gulf of Guinea meet hot air rising from the baked earth at this inland Cameroon spot.

(iStock)

9. Butembo, Democratic Republic of Congo 

129.50 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Butembo, in the DRC, is in Africa’s Great Lakes region—a swath of the continent long known for thunderstorms.  

10. Boende, Democratic Republic of Congo 

127.52 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year

Until NASA completed this research, scientists assumed the Congo Basin (which includes Boende) was the lightning capital of the world. During a lightning storm, “no place outside is safe and no place can be made safe,” says Kithil.

Lead Photo: Otto du Plessis/iStock

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