No. Tornadoes are made from interactions of wind currents and pressure differences within a thunderstorm. Electricity plays no role.
No. Tornadoes occur naturally.
Blizzards, tornadoes, and thunderstorms can all cause power outages by damaging or destroying power lines.
No. While tornadoes are usually accompanied by lightning and can sometimes produce static discharges, electricity has nothing to do with the way they work.
Even relatively weak tornadoes can knock down and snap power lines, causing power outages which can be localized or widespread.
Tornadoes are made of air necause they are a weather phenomenon and occur within Earth's atmosphere, which is made of air.
There are multivortex tornadoes that at times can look like they are made up of two or more tornadoes
Tornado-like whirlwinds made of fire are called firewhirls. Meteorologists do not consider them to be true tornadoes.
Tornadoes can cause catastrophic damage to vegetation and man-made structures.
Tornadoes do not produce gasses. They are made of air and do not change its composition.
There are no tornadoes that are made of water, but tornadoes do touch down on water fairly often. Tornadoes on water are called waterspouts.
Tornadoes are storms, and thus naturally occurring.
Like all electricity, Nigerian electricity is made from the flow of electrons. Electricity doesn't see race.