Step 1
Scan severe weather alerts with outage and aviation context during storms.
Georgia situational awareness can involve severe thunderstorms, tornado potential, tropical remnants, heat, outage impacts, and major aviation disruption around Atlanta. HazardNow helps keep those public signals in one practical scan.
Severe thunderstorms, tornado risk, tropical remnants, heat, power outages, and aviation delays can affect households, commuters, travelers, and operations across the state.
Step 1
Scan severe weather alerts with outage and aviation context during storms.
Step 2
Use tropical and flood-related indicators when remnants move inland.
Step 3
Review heat and preparedness signals during prolonged hot periods.
HazardNow combines public weather, fire, air quality, infrastructure, transportation, water, fuel, cyber, space weather, economic, and global stability signals. Review the data sources and limitations for source transparency. For Georgia, these links are useful starting points:
HazardNow is informational only. It is not an official warning system, emergency alert provider, evacuation authority, or substitute for NWS, FEMA, state emergency agencies, utilities, transportation agencies, local officials, or first responders. Use HazardNow to notice public signals, then follow official instructions for warnings, evacuations, road closures, shelters, utility restoration, health guidance, and protective actions.
HazardNow can help scan severe weather context, but tornado warnings and immediate protective actions must come from NWS, local alerts, and official emergency sources.
No. HazardNow is informational only and does not replace warnings, evacuation notices, shelter instructions, or local authority guidance.
Atlanta is a major aviation hub, and storm-related delays can affect travelers and logistics beyond the immediate storm area.
Heavy rain, flooding, tornado potential, outages, aviation disruption, and official local updates are useful to check together.