Powerful
Storm Battering Ireland and UK
A
powerful frontal boundary blasted across Ireland and the United
Kingdom on Friday with gusty winds and heavy rainfall.
1
February, 2014
The
heaviest rainfall fell in London during the evening and overnight
hours.
Ahead
of and during the frontal passage, winds over 40 mph occurred along
with a period of moderate to heavy rainfall.
Flooding
is again be a concern as heavy rainfall falling on already saturated
ground can quickly renew flooding problems.
Paris
had a period of rain later Friday night into Saturday morning before
the front pushed farther east.
The
front will continue to weaken as it continues eastward across Europe;
however, the low pressure center will shift southward, just west of
Scotland leading to more unsettled weather for Ireland and the United
Kingdom on Saturday.
While
squally showers will be common across Scotland, Wales, Northern
Ireland and Ireland on Saturday, the wind will be the bigger story.
Wind
gusts over 50 mph are expected to be common from Northern Ireland
through Ireland and into Wales and southwest England. Isolated gusts
over 70 mph will be possible in western Ireland and other exposed
coastal locations. The highest winds seen in the U.K. was a gust to
84 mph in Aberdaron.
Another
concern is that phenomenal waves will batter the coast of Northern
Ireland, Ireland and southwest England into Saturday.
Waves
over 10 meters (33 feet) are expected, which can lead to widespread
coastal flooding and closure of roadways near the coast.
A
very stormy pattern is expected to continue through next week across
Ireland and the United Kingdom.
Meanwhile
throughout Europe there has been extreme weather, with major floods
in Italy, high seas on France's coast and snowstroma in Eastern
Europe.
Italy battles floods as bad weather batters Europe
Areas of Italy and France are on flood alert as heavy rain brings chaos to parts of Europe, BBC reports.
1
February, 2014
Hundreds
of people were forced to evacuate their homes in the Italian city of
Pisa as the Arno river threatened to burst its banks on Friday.
High
seas are expected to cause widespread flooding along France's
Atlantic coast.
Meanwhile,
deep snow drifts left dozens of people stranded in Serbia.
Local
officials declared a state of emergency and deployed rescue teams to
help travellers trapped in their vehicles. Snow storms and strong
winds have been sweeping across Eastern Europe.
Italian
media said a stretch of medieval wall measuring about 30m (95ft) in
the town of Volterra, in the province of Pisa, collapsed as a result
of heavy rain.
The
French department of Finistere, in the west of the country, was
placed on red alert as forecasters warned of huge waves and extensive
flooding. Ten other French departments were also on alert for rising
water levels.
At
least two people died and scores had to be airlifted to safety after
floods hit south-eastern France earlier this month.
Severe
storms have been battering Europe for much of January.
Families
evacuated as Storm Brigid wreaks havoc around country
Families
had to be rescued from their homes as the country was hit with gale
force winds, heavy rain and serious flooding in several parts.
1
February, 2014
Limerick
was among the areas worst hit. Emergency services worked flat out in
a number of housing estates where people were left trapped in their
homes.
Half
a dozen boats were used to rescue several elderly people from the
city's Lee housing estate. Fire crews were also involved in a major
operation. Ambulances were on standby.
A
distressed Ann Pickford and her daughter Audrey Considine (pictured)
had to be rescued from their flooded home on Athlunkard Street,
Limerick where the Abbey river, a smaller river off the Shannon,
burst its banks.
Resident
Sean Curtin, who lives on Nicholas Street, said the flooding had
caused up to four feet of damage to people homes with Limerick Fire
and Rescue forced to evacuate some elderly residents from Athlunkard
Street, St Mary’s Park and Lee Estate.
Some
residents managed to wade through the water.
In
the neighbouring Lahinch area giant waves washed over three storey
guest houses on the seafront and huge boulders were swept away into a
car park.
With
winds gusting at up to 120km/h, (75 mph) Met Eireann issued a status
orange weather warning for Munster, Leinster, Connacht and parts of
Ulster. At one stage more than 5,500 properties were without power,
4000 of them in Ennis, Co Clare.
Houses
near Castlegregory, Co Kerry were cut off when rocks, boulders and
other debris blocked the only access road to the Kilshannig area.
Parts
of Galway city and Tralee, Co Kerry were also flooded and emergency
crews helped provide sandbags and in Cork city, a stretch of the
River Lee overflowed its banks.
AA
Roadwatch warned drivers to be careful because of the worsening
weather and several flights from Dublin Airport to Britain, Paris and
Madrid had to be cancelled.
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