January 2007 North American ice storm

January 2007 North American ice storm
Category 2 "Significant" (RSI/NOAA: 3.05)
TypeExtratropical cyclones
Ice storms
Winter storms
FormedJanuary 11, 2007
DissipatedJanuary 24, 2007
Lowest pressure961 millibars (28.4 inHg)[1]
Maximum snowfall
or ice accretion
4 inches (10 cm) of ice (Oklahoma, Missouri), 32 inches (81 cm) of snow (Gaspe Peninsula)
Fatalities85+ total
Damage$380 million
Areas affectedEastern, Central United States, and Eastern Canada

The January 2007 North American ice storm was a severe ice storm that affected a large swath of North America from the Rio Grande Valley to New England and southeastern Canada, starting on January 11 and lasting until January 16. It was followed by a second wave in the Southern United States from Texas to the Carolinas from January 16 through January 18, and a third one that hit the southern Plains and mid-Atlantic states as well as Newfoundland and Labrador from January 19 to January 24. It resulted in at least 74 deaths across 12 U.S. states and three Canadian provinces, and caused hundreds of thousands of residents across the U.S. and Canada to lose electric power.[2][3]

The event was similar to the 1998 Ice storm that struck portions of eastern Canada and northern New England, which were affected by multiple waves of ice precipitation over a period of five days.

  1. ^ Service, NOAA's National Weather. "WPC Surface Analysis Archive". www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov.
  2. ^ "Snow, ice, sleet make southern Plains miserable". CNN. January 19, 2007. Archived from the original on January 21, 2007. Retrieved January 20, 2007.
  3. ^ "Deadly winter blast blows through Plains". CNN. Archived from the original on January 22, 2007. Retrieved August 8, 2013.