Oklahoma City — AEM's 2025 lightning report shows Oklahoma led the United States in lightning flash density, averaging 73 flashes per square mile, while Florida registered 72.9 flashes per square mile. Kay County, Oklahoma, recorded the highest county rate at 123.4 flashes per square mile. AEM's Earth Networks Total Lightning Network used more than 1,800 sensors to detect about 88.4 million lightning flashes nationwide, equal to roughly 430 million individual pulses. Texas registered the largest total strike volume, with about 13 million strikes. Florida reported four lightning-related deaths in 2025. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
This 60-second summary was prepared by the JQJO editorial team after reviewing 6 original reports from Eagle-Tribune, Newser, phl17, 720 AM WGN - Chicago's News & Talk, KFOR 4 Oklahoma City and eu.palmbeachpost.com.
Meteorological agencies, emergency managers, and insurers benefited from more granular ENTLN lightning data that enable improved risk mapping, targeted warnings, and refined preparedness planning.
Residents, outdoor workers, and property owners in high-density lightning areas—notably parts of Oklahoma, Kay County, Texas and Florida—suffered elevated safety risks and property exposure, with four confirmed lightning-related deaths in Florida in 2025.
After reading and researching latest news.... Oklahoma's 2025 AEM report quantifies a shift in flash density to the Great Plains, with Oklahoma at 73 flashes/sq mi and Kay County at 123.4. ENTLN data from over 1,800 sensors recorded about 88.4 million flashes nationally; Texas led in total strikes in 2025.
No left-leaning sources found for this story.
Oklahoma Tops Florida as U.S. Lightning Density Capital
Eagle-Tribune Newser phl17 720 AM WGN - Chicago's News & Talk KFOR 4 Oklahoma City eu.palmbeachpost.comNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
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