It looks like another storm is on its way – as hurricane-force winds heading for Norway look set to brush the UK.
Storm Ingunn, named by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute, has brought strong gusts to the northern parts of the UK.
Yellow warnings for wind were issued by the Met Office for Scotland and parts of northern England and Northern Ireland amid forecast gusts of more than 100mph.
A projection produced by the Met Office (see below) shows the worst of the extreme weather passing by the northern tip of the UK.
The Met Office said: “The rapidly deepening area of low pressure passing to the north of Scotland today has been named Storm Ingunn by the Norwegian Meteorological.
“Severe gales will affect northern Britain, but in Norway, red warnings are in place for hurricane force winds and avalanches.”
The UK has been hit by ten named storms seen since September, and this month alone has seen Storm Jocelyn hurtle towards the UK, hard on the heels of the deadly Storm Isha.
But the worst of the latest bad weather is on its way to the Nordics.
The BBC reported wind speeds of 155mph have already been recorded in the Faroe Islands – far stronger than any gust seen during the UK’s Great 1987 Storm.
Norwegian authorities warned that the country could see its most powerful storm in three decades and urged people to stay indoors.
AP reported that by midday on Wednesday there were scattered reports of ferry lines linking Norwegians islands suspending their services, and the closing of schools, roads, tunnels and bridges across the mountainous country.
The storm was expected to land in central Norway around midday Wednesday before moving north Thursday.