DUBLIN: Ireland dispatched its armed forces to bolster flood defences on Sunday and warned people against non-essential travel as the remnants of Hurricane Ophelia threatened the country with its worst storm in 50 years.
Ophelia, the sixth major hurricane of the Atlantic season, is due to make landfall on the south west coast of Ireland at around on Monday, the Irish weather service said, describing the storm as “unprecedented.”
Hurricane force winds are likely off Ireland’s south coast but they are expected to ease before they reach the coastline, said the weather service, which has declared a Status Red weather alert.
The weather service has warned some gusts may exceed 130 kilometres per hour.
The government has also warned of localised coastal flooding and likely disruption to transport and electricity services.
“You should not be out in this storm this is an extreme weather event,” the chairman of Ireland’s National Emergency Coordination Group Sean Hogan said at a briefing.
Asked if it was likely to be the worst storm in half a century, he said the “comparable weather event” was Hurricane Debbie, which killed 12 in Ireland in 1961. Ophelia has the potential to be a life-threatening event in Ireland, he said.
Published in Dawn, October 16th, 2017
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