_Happy boy Posted February 20, 2022 Share Posted February 20, 2022 Link : https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-60452334 Storm Franklin is forecast to hit the UK after Storm Eunice left 1.4 million homes without power. The Met Office has issued an amber wind warning for Northern Ireland for Monday morning and yellow ones for parts of the UK from Sunday. There is a yellow rain warning in the north west of England, where two severe flood alerts indicate danger to life. This comes days after one of the worst storms in the UK in decades in which three people died. More than 80,000 homes still have no power. Franklin is the third storm to hit the UK in a week, and follows the disruption from Storm Dudley and Storm Eunice. High winds could cause further power cuts, transport delays and damage to properties, the Met Office has warned. Environment agencies have issued hundreds of alerts for flooding across the UK, and the North West is expected to be worst hit by up to 80mm of rain. There are two severe flood warnings indicating danger to life in close to the River Mersey at East Didsbury and West Didsbury and Northenden. Natural Resources Wales (NRW) said flooding was expected in several areas along the River Severn in Powys. More than 20 flood warnings and seven alerts have also been issued across the Scottish Borders, Ayrshire, Orkney and the Western Isles by the Scottish Environment Protection Agency. In pictures: Storm Eunice's trail of destruction Power cuts continue amid new yellow warnings How do I claim for storm damage? The amber warning for wind in Northern Ireland runs from midnight until 07:00 GMT on Monday. There are milder yellow warnings for wind in Wales, Northern Ireland, the south-west of Scotland and most of England starting from midday on Sunday and until 13:00 GMT on Monday. A yellow warning for rain, meaning "there is a chance that homes and businesses could be flooded", is in place in the northwest of England until 18:00 GMT on Sunday. The focus of the yellow rain warning is around Greater Manchester and extends to Blackburn with Darwen, Cheshire, Cumbria, Lancashire, Merseyside and Warrington. The same warning in also applies in Derbyshire, Durham, Northumberland and Staffordshire in the West Midlands. On Friday a record number of homes were thought to have been without power, said the Energy Networks Association. And 83,000 homes still have no power, it said. This includes around 29,000 in South West England, 23,000 in South East England, 20,000 in South England, 7,000 in Eastern England and around 3,000 in South Wales, it said. Electricity provider Western Power Distribution (WPD) said the outage was the most widespread recorded for the south west of England. Father and son stranded in Scottish mountains Man's lucky escape as car crushed by bricks Marmosets spooked by storm escape enclosure Hundreds of homes evacuated amid flooding fears On Friday Storm Eunice tore through the UK on Friday bringing widespread disruption as trees were toppled, trains were cancelled, schools closed as well as power supplies being affected. A female passenger in her 30s died in Highgate, north London after a tree fell on a car. The driver, a man in his 30s, was taken to hospital. A man died in Merseyside after debris hit the windscreen of a car he was a passenger in. In Alton, Hampshire, two men were in a pickup truck when it was crushed by a falling tree. The passenger died at the scene while the driver was taken to hospital with serious injuries. Meteorologist Becky Mitchell said this was the first time the Met Office had recorded three major storms in a week since the naming system was introduced seven years ago. She told the PA news agency: "At the moment we've got a really active jet stream, which is why we're seeing so many storms track right towards the UK. "We had Dudley on Wednesday, Eunice on Friday and Franklin today." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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