Dubai Telegraph - Power cuts and transport chaos as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland and UK

EUR -
AED 4.193409
AFN 71.936261
ALL 94.313517
AMD 420.265722
ANG 2.044352
AOA 1047.066868
ARS 1689.072446
AUD 1.659662
AWG 2.056738
AZN 1.945481
BAM 1.958174
BBD 2.299788
BDT 140.730617
BGN 1.930714
BHD 0.430513
BIF 3396.988644
BMD 1.141839
BND 1.476978
BOB 7.907414
BRL 5.927742
BSD 1.141884
BTN 107.892443
BWP 15.517473
BYN 3.311486
BYR 22380.050817
BZD 2.296464
CAD 1.622442
CDF 2589.120289
CHF 0.923411
CLF 0.026737
CLP 1052.308099
CNY 7.762395
CNH 7.765695
COP 3935.109456
CRC 517.923377
CUC 1.141839
CUP 30.258742
CVE 110.39836
CZK 24.263572
DJF 203.332061
DKK 7.474417
DOP 67.901727
DZD 152.241244
EGP 56.290733
ERN 17.12759
ETB 184.085649
FJD 2.567711
FKP 0.865351
GBP 0.862115
GEL 3.020169
GGP 0.865351
GHS 12.914374
GIP 0.865351
GMD 83.354533
GNF 10010.092064
GTQ 8.711485
GYD 238.844337
HKD 8.955212
HNL 30.55778
HRK 7.534429
HTG 149.239626
HUF 354.896792
IDR 20413.803496
ILS 3.411302
IMP 0.865351
INR 107.964733
IQD 1495.800358
IRR 1570314.535312
ISK 143.803363
JEP 0.865351
JMD 179.797981
JOD 0.809586
JPY 184.907748
KES 147.869387
KGS 99.854174
KHR 4591.5264
KMF 495.557874
KPW 1027.655794
KRW 1762.782919
KWD 0.353502
KYD 0.951533
KZT 554.399998
LAK 25609.8242
LBP 102250.125882
LKR 383.942116
LRD 207.807389
LSL 18.760981
LTL 3.371555
LVL 0.690687
LYD 7.335862
MAD 10.700273
MDL 20.182026
MGA 4858.84815
MKD 61.634438
MMK 2397.462543
MNT 4087.701951
MOP 9.223981
MRU 45.571249
MUR 53.940134
MVR 17.641444
MWK 1979.957083
MXN 20.014748
MYR 4.648392
MZN 72.96563
NAD 18.761145
NGN 1577.838644
NIO 42.020576
NOK 11.338818
NPR 172.629779
NZD 2.023231
OMR 0.439035
PAB 1.141859
PEN 3.899293
PGK 5.013078
PHP 69.912559
PKR 317.516265
PLN 4.289605
PYG 6953.430104
QAR 4.162246
RON 5.242754
RSD 117.385642
RUB 88.243753
RWF 1676.195463
SAR 4.289363
SBD 9.194036
SCR 15.889801
SDG 685.104142
SEK 11.113739
SGD 1.477066
SHP 0.852498
SLE 28.318388
SLL 23943.80396
SOS 652.585457
SRD 42.812695
STD 23633.768713
STN 24.529739
SVC 9.991069
SYP 126.209896
SZL 18.756576
THB 38.008402
TJS 10.584701
TMT 3.996438
TND 3.3822
TOP 2.749276
TRY 53.256638
TTD 7.762343
TWD 36.406978
TZS 2997.331628
UAH 51.246329
UGX 4185.073842
USD 1.141839
UYU 45.945703
UZS 13761.684201
VES 708.800171
VND 30018.955918
VUV 136.083591
WST 3.175321
XAF 656.747467
XAG 0.019725
XAU 0.000284
XCD 3.085878
XCG 2.057877
XDR 0.817981
XOF 656.750346
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.471391
ZAR 18.766358
ZMK 10277.916815
ZMW 20.67261
ZWL 367.671798
  • RBGPF

    0.2000

    61.5

    +0.33%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22

    +0.32%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    18.8

    +0.27%

  • VOD

    -0.1950

    13.695

    -1.42%

  • AZN

    1.0500

    189.46

    +0.55%

  • RELX

    -0.0600

    31.28

    -0.19%

  • GSK

    -0.1050

    52.395

    -0.2%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    83.4

    +0.47%

  • RIO

    0.2090

    93.949

    +0.22%

  • BCC

    -2.0620

    78.958

    -2.61%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    21.795

    +0.11%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    12.89

    +0.78%

  • BP

    0.4100

    37.54

    +1.09%

  • BCE

    -0.5330

    22.387

    -2.38%

  • BTI

    -0.3100

    62.45

    -0.5%

Power cuts and transport chaos as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland and UK
Power cuts and transport chaos as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland and UK / Photo: PAUL FAITH - AFP

Power cuts and transport chaos as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland and UK

Storm Eowyn caused havoc Friday as it battered Ireland, Northern Ireland and Scotland, killing one person and leaving hundreds of thousands of homes without power, flights grounded and schools shut, officials said.

Text size:

Millions of people across the three nations were urged to shelter at home from the "destructive" storm as Ireland recorded its strongest-ever wind gusts. One man died in Ireland when a tree fell on his car, police said.

Gusts of 183 kilometres (114 miles) per hour -- breaking an 80-year-old record -- brought down power lines, felled trees, blocked roads and destroyed two Irish sports facilities.

By evening, the highest-level red warning had been lifted in Ireland and Scotland, but authorities still called for vigilance.

"It is so important that people follow... advice not to travel because if people stay at home and don't travel then it means they don't invite that risk to themselves," Scotland's deputy first minister Kate Forbes told BBC radio.

Scotland, Ireland and Northern Ireland closed schools and cancelled trains, flights and ferries.

After winds eased, Dublin Airport -- which had earlier announced that airlines had cancelled more than 120 scheduled departures and 110 arrivals -- said its first flight took off at around 0930 GMT.

Flights were also cancelled at other airports including Belfast in Northern Ireland and Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow in Scotland.

Damage in Ireland included the destruction of an ice-skating rink near Dublin and a multi-million-pound indoor games facility in western County Mayo after winds ripped through them.

Cathriona Heffernan, 25, from Galway city in Ireland, described the winds as "crazy" even in the early stages of the storm, adding that five 60-year-old trees had been uprooted.

"One of them split right in half, so it's scary to think just how strong the wind was to be able to do that," she said.

Satellite imagery suggested a dangerous weather phenomenon known as a sting jet had developed over Ireland on Friday morning, the Met Office said.

A sting jet is a small area of very intense winds, which can be as strong as 160 kilometres per hour or more, it said.

The same type of extreme weather event was the cause of England's "Great Storm" in October 1987, which claimed 18 lives.

- 'Dangerous and destructive' -

In Ireland, 715,000 homes and businesses were without power while in Northern Ireland, over 93,000 were hit by outages, electricity suppliers said.

The highest wind speed recorded in Britain on Friday was 149 kilometres per hour at Brizlee Wood in Northumberland in northeast England, according to the Met Office.

The strongest gust ever recorded in the UK is 228 kilometres per hour at Fraserburgh in eastern Scotland, on February 13, 1989.

Irish forecaster Met Eireann said on X the previous record in Ireland was 182 kilometres per hour, recorded in 1945.

Northern Ireland Electricity Networks said Storm Eowyn was causing "widespread damage" to the electricity network.

"We anticipate we will begin assessing the damage to the network after 2:00 pm once the red weather warning has been lifted," it said in a statement.

In Scotland over 22,000 homes were without electricity, suppliers said, fallen trees and debris having damaged power lines.

Britain's environment agency warned of flooding in southern and central England over the coming days.

Ahead of the storm, some 4.5 million people on Thursday received emergency alerts on their phones, the "largest real-life use of the tool to date" on Thursday, the UK government said.

Storms, however, are natural phenomena and to date no specific scientific attribution to climate change has been made for this storm.

I.Menon--DT