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Storm Amy in the UK: What Happened in the Last 24 Hours (Fri 3 Oct PM → Sat 4 Oct PM) — Impacts, Warnings, Travel, Power Cuts & What’s Next

Key takeaways at a glance


The last 24 hours: how Storm Amy unfolded

Storm Amy — the first named storm of the 2025/26 season — was named on Wednesday 1 October as models locked on to a rapidly deepening low tracking into the UK and Ireland. By Friday afternoon (3 Oct), the Met Office escalated to amber wind for parts of northern Scotland and widespread yellow warnings elsewhere, flagging a high risk of flying debris, power interruptions and transport disruption. Met Office+1

Overnight into Saturday (4 Oct), Amy delivered the core wind field. Peak gusts in exposed locations of Scotland pushed well into the 90s mph, with widespread 50–70 mph inland gusts across Northern Ireland, northern England, Wales and parts of central/southern England. Agencies reported downed trees, blocked roads, fencing and roof damage. The Guardian

By Saturday morning, DNOs (distribution network operators) were battling large-area power cuts: SSEN (north of Scotland) cited ~62,000 customers still off at one stage and launched a “comprehensive welfare operation” with hot-food vans for affected communities. NIE Networks/regional coverage indicated tens of thousands off overnight in Northern Ireland, improving gradually through the day. Inverness Courier+1

Across the capital, London’s Royal Parks (including Hyde Park and Regent’s Park) closed during the worst of the winds to reduce risk from branches and debris. The Guardian

Meanwhile, grid conditions flipped to long runs of negative wholesale electricity prices on Saturday as wind output surged toward 20 GW, underscoring both the scale of the storm and the constraints on moving Scottish wind to demand centres further south. Financial Times


UK regional impacts (Fri PM → Sat PM)

Scotland (amber focus)

Northern Ireland

North of England

Wales & Midlands

South & London


Travel disruption: rail, road, sea and air


Power cuts and energy: where the lights went out — and why prices went negative


Confirmed casualty and safety posture

Police in Ireland confirmed that a man in his 40s died in Letterkenny, Co Donegal, in a weather-related incident during Storm Amy’s peak. Authorities across the UK and Ireland urged the public to avoid coastline areas, beware flying debris, and defer non-essential travel while amber conditions persisted. Sky News+1


Official warnings (Saturday 4 Oct)

The Met Office named Storm Amy on 1 October as the first storm of the 2025/26 season; it trended as a classic early-October deep low bringing a vigorous wind field and squally rain bands. Met Office


Timeline: the last 24 hours, hour-by-hour highlights

Friday 3 Oct (late afternoon–evening):

Overnight into early Saturday:

Saturday morning:

Saturday midday–afternoon:


What to do now: practical guidance for households, drivers and commuters

If you’re without power (Scotland / NI hotspots):

If you must travel:

Around homes and workplaces:


Why did Storm Amy hit so hard?

Early-season (October) Atlantic lows can deepen rapidly as thermal contrasts sharpen. Amy’s track placed the tightest pressure gradient over north and west Scotland, aligning core winds with orographic acceleration on coasts and high routes; strong sting-jet-like bursts can locally spike gusts well above the general gradient. The Met Office highlighted Amy as first storm of the season and signalled the potential for significant transport and power disruption days in advance. Met Office+1

On the power side, the same meteorology drove massive wind generation, contributing to record-length negative wholesale price windows on Saturday — a reminder of both the UK’s renewable strength and the grid bottlenecks (notably moving Scottish wind south). Financial Times


What’s next? (Short-range outlook)

As we head through Saturday night into Sunday, the amber zone shrinks and winds ease, but blustery/showery conditions persist, especially in the north and west, with cooler air filtering in behind Amy. Always check the Met Office app/site for updated warnings before making plans. Met Office


Frequently asked questions (FAQ)

Q1) Is Storm Amy over?
A: The worst winds have peaked in many areas south of the amber zone, but northern Scotland remains under amber until 21:00 BST Saturday. Expect lingering blustery/showery weather into Sunday. ITVX

Q2) Why did London parks close if the storm mainly hit the north?
A: While the strongest gusts targeted Scotland/NI, southern England still saw hazardous gusts and tree-risk in busy green spaces, so Royal Parks temporarily closed as a precaution. The Guardian

Q3) How many people lost power?
A: At various points overnight and into Saturday, Scotland and NI saw tens of thousands off-supply; SSEN cited ~62,000 still off in the north of Scotland at one update; NI peaked around ~65,000 with ~22,000 off late morning. In the Republic of Ireland, 200,000+ were affected. Numbers change as repairs progress. Inverness Courier+2ITVX+2

Q4) Why were electricity prices negative if people lost power?
A: Negative wholesale prices reflect system-level oversupply, not the experience at your home. High wind output can exceed demand/transfer capacity; constraints and curtailment push wholesale prices negative, but retail bills stay fixed. Financial Times

Q5) Will there be more named storms soon?
A: The UK Storm Centre list for 2025/26 starts with Amy; more names follow as criteria are met (impacts expected). It’s too early to say which low will be named next, so watch Met Office channels. Met Office

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