UK storm names for 2024/25 released
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Published
The list of storm names for the 2024/25 season has been announced.
Names run in alphabetical order and will start with Ashley, followed by Bert, then Conall, and later on might reach as far as Izzy, Rafi and Tilly.
Storms get named by the UK Met Office, in partnership with the Republic of Ireland’s Met Éireann and the Netherlands’ KNMI, when they are forecast to cause “medium” or “high” impacts.
Wind is the main factor for naming a storm, but sometimes rain or snow are taken in to account as part of the process.
Why are storms named?
Met Office Head of Situational Awareness Will Lang, who leads responses in times of severe weather, said: “This is the 10th year of us naming storms and we do it because it works. Naming storms helps to make communication of severe weather easier and provides clarity.”
Names are selected from a shortlist of favourites submitted by the public but also includes three historic names from the Met Office’s 170 year history.
You may notice a few Dutch names too after KNMI, the national weather service of the Netherlands, became part of the western storm naming group in 2019.
The list runs from the start of September to the end of August the following year to coincide with the start of autumn and the end of summer, when the likelihood of low pressure systems and the potential for named storms increase.
Why are there no storms for Q, U, X, Y and Z?
To maintain consistency with the naming of tropical storms and hurricanes in the North Atlantic by the US National Hurricane Center which produces six lists of storm names that are used in rotation.
The list of storm names covers only 21 letters of the alphabet as it is difficult to find six suitable names (one for each of the six rotating lists) starting with Q, U, X, Y and Z.
So, if you are called Quentin, Ursula, Xavier, Yvonne or Zendaya you will never see your name on the list of storms.
Record number of storms in last 12 months
The list runs from early September to late August the following year to coincide with the start of autumn and the end of summer, when the likelihood of low-pressure systems and the potential for named storms increase.
A wet and windy autumn and winter contributed to 12 named storms in 2023/24. It is the highest number since the naming of storms started in 2015.
The last 12 months has seen frequent periods of the jet stream either being directed towards the UK or to the south of the UK and this helped develop and steer low pressure systems to our shores which sometimes became named storms.
But no two years tend to be the same.
One of the challenges for forecasters comes from the natural variability in our weather patterns. In the 2022/23 season there were only two named storms and they both occurred in August.
And sometimes, storms can come in clusters. In February 2022 there were three storms in a week – Dudley, Eunice and Franklin. A Met Office red wind warning was issued for Storm Eunice. The winds gusted 122mph (196km/h) on the Isle of Wight – England’s highest recorded gust speed.
Does climate change impact UK storms?
We know climate change is making our weather more extreme so that when it rains, that rain tends to be heavier with a greater chance of causing flooding.
It is more difficult to link storms to climate change.
The UK has a history of impactful storms stretching back hundreds of years, long before the introduction of named storms in 2015.
Met Office scientist Emily Carlisle says: “There is some evidence that storms with strong winds (windstorms) will become slightly more frequent in the future in north-west Europe and also become more clustered, so that we experience several storms one after the other.”
Scientists are more confident that the coastal impacts of windstorms, from storm surges and high waves, will worsen as the sea level rises.
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Published1 September 2022
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Published27 October 2021
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