Millions of people in Ireland and northern parts of the U.K. are being urged to stay at home as hurricane-force winds disabled power networks.
The windstorm, one of the UK's most powerful for a decade, brought red warnings, severe impacts and, tragically, deaths.
The storm had knocked out power to more than half a million utility customers by early Friday as it moved across Ireland.
Storm Éowyn has unleashed strong and damaging winds over the British Isles, and particularly over Ireland and Scotland.
The Met Office issued a super rare red warning across southern Scotland and the Central Belt for Friday, January 24.
Storm Eowyn is causing mayhem across the UK today with hundreds of cancelled flights, school closures while all trains in Scotland have been halted. Two rare warnings meaning a risk to life are in ...
The storm brought 100 mile-per-hour winds to the island and also battered Scotland and northern England. Britain’s weather office issued a red warning, its highest level of alert.
Buildings are damaged and 100,000 homes and businesses are left without electricity as gusts over 100mph are recorded.
Councils across Scotland have made the decision to close schools and nurseries tomorrow due to the red weather warning from Storm Eowyn. Thousands of facilites across the country will now be shut ...
Emergency crews are cleaning up after a storm bearing record-breaking winds left at least one person dead and more than a ...
Ireland has called in help from England and France to restore power to hundreds of thousands of people after the most ...
Storm damage is covered on most home insurance policies but there may be exemptions that mean your claim gets rejected ...