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Britain braces for storm today

Published: 28 Oct 2013 - 02:13 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 11:50 pm


A boat is dragged from its mooring on the beach and destroyed by large waves near Brighton Marina, in southern England, yesterday ahead of a predicted storm.

LONDON: Hurricane-force winds are forecast to disrupt road, rail and airport networks today when one of the strongest storms in decades is expected to hit the southern half of Britain during rush-hour, forecasters warned yesterday.

Local media dubbed the storm “Saint Jude”, after the patron saint of lost causes who is traditionally celebrated on October 28, and made comparisons to 1987 when a storm killed 18 people in Britain and felled some 15 million trees.

The storm is expected to bring 80mph winds and heavy rain to Britain early today. The winds could affect commuter routes north of London and across the central region, the Met Office said. 

Prime Minister David Cameron chaired a meeting between the Environment Agency, forecasters and government departments to discuss contingency plans for the impact of the storm.

Britain’s rail network operator said a revised timetable was already being put in place on some routes while the Highways Agency warned road bridges may need to be closed. London’s Heathrow airport said it was expecting delays and cancellations.

“The thing that’s unusual about this one is that most of our storms develop out over the Atlantic so that they’ve done all their strengthening and deepening by the time they reach us,” Met Office spokeswoman Helen Chivers said. 

“This one is developing as it crosses the UK, which is why it brings the potential for significant disruption ... and that doesn’t happen very often.” The Met Office warned of potential disruption to transport and power supplies. Winds peaked at more than 110 mph when the 1987 storm hit without warning, causing millions of pounds of damage and provoking criticism of Britain’s national forecaster.

The Met Office said advances in forecasting technology had allowed it to predict today’s storm well in advance, and that it had started discussions with local councils, emergency services and transport operators early last week. Last year a storm with winds of up to 81 mph hit parts of Scotland in what the Met Office said was Britain’s most severe storm since 1998.

Reuters