Rare North Atlantic hurricane threatens Azores, Ireland

FILE – A woman finds her passage blocked by fallen trees in London, Oct. 16, 1987, after overnight storms with hurricane-force winds caused widespread damage. On the 30th anniversary of the storm, Oct. 16, 2017, Hurricane Ophelia is expected to take aim at Britain and Ireland. (Photo Courtesy: AP)

Hurricane Ophelia, a rare storm for the North Atlantic, was expected to bring high winds and rough seas to five western counties of Ireland this weekend.

Ophelia, strengthening offshore near the Azores Islands, was a Category 3 storm, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center. It had top sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph) and was expected to produce total rain accumulations of up to 10 centimeters (4 inches) over the southern Azores.

Seven of the nine islands of the Azores were on red alert as ordered by regional civil protection services. The islands were expecting heavy rainfall overnight.

The 245,000 people who inhabit the Azores were told to stay inside while the storm passes.

Ophelia was expected to wind down slightly before reaching Ireland as a tropical cyclone on Monday. Five counties were placed on red alert for severe weather conditions on Monday and Tuesday, according to the Irish Meteorological Service.

Ireland, which only rarely sees hurricanes, was expected to endure winds in excess of 130 kph (80 mph) on Monday.

Coincidentally, Monday will be the 30th anniversary of what has been nicknamed the Great Storm of 1987, a hurricane that took down 15 million trees in Britain and killed more than 20 people in Britain and France together. | via Voice of America

Popular

PBBM hails timely completion of 2 new school buildings in QC

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet “I am very, very happy to see that the students are already using it.” After a major fire gutted an old building...

DEPDev pushes for stronger gov’t-industry tie-ups to boost labor market resilience

By Brian Campued The Department of Economy, Planning, and Development (DEPDev) on Tuesday called for stronger collaboration between government and industry to equip workers with...

‘Hayo, Hinay, Hinga, Hinto’: DepEd issues emergency learning continuity guidelines

By Brian Campued Recognizing that natural disasters, environmental hazards, and human-induced incidents continue to threaten learning continuity, the Department of Education (DepEd) has issued new...

PhilHealth boosts healthcare services in DepEd schools ahead of class opening

By Brian Campued As the Department of Education (DepEd) intensifies preparations ahead of the opening of the School Year 2026–2027 on June 8 through the...