The European avalanche warning services together form the EAWS (European Avalanche Warning Services), a cross-national organization that strives for the most uniform avalanche situation reports possible in Europe. This involves standardized methods in avalanche warning on the one hand and standardized definitions and terminology on the other. Probably the best-known and most fundamental product produced by the EAWS is the five-stage danger level scale, which is defined uniformly throughout Europe.
The most recent conference of the EAWS in summer 2017, the following innovations were decided:
Integration of the 5 avalanche problems into the LLBs
The avalanche problems (fresh snow, drifting snow, old snow, wet snow, sliding snow) are to be increasingly used in all European bulletins and now have standardized definitions and icons. The definitions and graphics developed by the Tyrolean Avalanche Warning Service have largely been adopted. The avalanche problems serve to describe typical situations in more detail and are intended to support avalanche warning officers and winter sports enthusiasts in assessing the situation. The avalanche problems provide supplementary information in addition to the danger level and the description of the danger points and contain general information on the types of avalanches to be expected depending on the problem, the characteristic spatial distribution and the location of the weak layer in the snowpack, as well as typical trigger mechanisms and the duration of the hazard.
Here is a detailed definition of the avalanche problems as a pdf.