The warning will be in effect between 9pm and midnight, when Met Éireann says "Storm Ellen will produce a core of very severe and destructive winds." The earlier orange warning will continue in the county overnight from midnight.
Storm Ellen contains the remnants of Tropical Storm Kyle - which hit earlier in the week - and will progress through parts of Scotland.
Many parts of the UK are yet to recover from the impact of Storm Ciara, and now Storm Dennis has caused further damage to property and homes. A red weather warning for rain is in place on Sunday for south Wales, as heavy rain and strong winds continue to affect the UK with more than 300 flood warnings issued.
According to forecasters, the winds from Storm Ellen will begin to hit the UK on Thursday evening. Winds reaching 46mph are expected to hit parts of London around 9pm on Thursday according to Windy.com.
What is Storm Ellen? Storm Ellen is expected to bring more severe wind and heavy rain to the UK this week. The front is moving in from the Atlantic and contains the remnants of Tropical Storm Kyle. Storm Kyle formed off the East Coast of the US, but has now merged with another storm that came from Greenland.
Storm Ellen hit Ireland with winds of 'Category 1' hurricane strength – 130.000 homes without power. Reports are coming of more than 130,000 homes, businesses and farms without power after Storm Ellen swept over Ireland last night. Destructive winds up to 180 km/h were reported just off the coast of southern Ireland!
Boating at high speeds in choppy waters can cause your vessel to capsize or intake too much water. Ensure that your navigation lights are on. There may be other boaters out on the water who might not be able to see you in the poor visibility.
What will the next storm be named? The next storm will be named Evert. With windy weather hitting the UK on March 11, 2021, there has been some speculation that the storm could be named this week. The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for wind in England and Wales, with gusts of 50-55 mph likely inland.
These warnings are given a colour (yellow, amber or red) depending on a combination of both the impact the weather may have and the likelihood of those impacts occurring. Yellow and Amber warnings represent a range of impact levels and likelihoods.
An amber warning is the next level down from a red warning, so the situation is not quite as severe. Amber means it is quite likely that bad weather will affect people, possibly including travel delays, road and rail closures and power cuts.
“A status yellow weather alert is given to warn those at risk from certain weather because of their location and/or their activity. “A status orange weather warning is given before expected weather conditions that could significantly impact people, property and activity in an area.
Thus, an ORANGE warning is a sign that “with intense rains, flooding is threatening, and the public is advised to be alert for possible evacuation.” In short, be ready to evacuate if you're in areas under the Orange warning signal. The “Red” signal constitutes an emergency.
The colour can be Orange or Red “if it is already a flood situation and heavy rainfall is expected”. Scattered or isolated heavy is to be designated Yellow. For isolated extremely heavy rainfall or scattered heavy to very heavy rainfall, the colour is Red.
Named by Ireland's Met Office, Ellen is the UK's fifth named storm of the 2019-2020 season. Emerging from a "decayed tropical cyclone", it was forecast to sweep across Ireland before hitting all of the UK's west coast, the Met Office said.
Storm Ellen is forming over the Atlantic fuelled by the remnants of Hurricane Kyle as shown here in Figure 2 which is a display of Airmass temperature and satellite imagery from the European satellite, Meteosat.
Gale to storm force winds, southeast veering southwest are expected this evening and tonight on all Irish coastal waters and on the Irish Sea. Winds will reach violent storm force 11 for a time on coasts.
If another weather system is deemed strong enough to be a storm, its name has been predetermined. For the 2019/20 season, we have already witnessed Storm Atiyah, Storm Brendan and Storm Ciara. Following the latest system, Storm Dennis, will be Storm Ellen, Storm Francis and Storm Gerda.
The criteria we use for naming storms is based on our National Severe Weather Warnings service. This is based on a combination of both the impact the weather may have, and the likelihood of those impacts occurring. A storm will be named when it has the potential to cause an amber or red warning.
| 2019 Atlantic hurricane season |
|---|
| Name | Dorian |
| • Maximum winds | 185 mph (295 km/h) (1-minute sustained) |
| • Lowest pressure | 910 mbar (hPa; 26.87 inHg) |
| Seasonal statistics |
The combination of snow and high winds created blizzard like conditions. Forecaster Joanna Donnelly told the Irish Mirror before the front hit: "Emma is a storm caused by an area of low pressure. Travel chaos occurred as the heavy snow fall met with gale force winds and even thunder.