Storm Brendan: Experts warn of 'unusual and dangerous combination of tide, storm surge and inshore waves' in coastal areas

Experts warn of 'unusual and dangerous combination of tide, storm surge and inshore waves' in coastal areas during storm BrendanExperts warn of 'unusual and dangerous combination of tide, storm surge and inshore waves' in coastal areas during storm Brendan
Experts warn of 'unusual and dangerous combination of tide, storm surge and inshore waves' in coastal areas during storm Brendan
Storm Brendan is forecast to batter parts of Scotland today with hurricane winds of up to 80mph on the coastline.

Yellow severe weather warnings for strong winds will be in force from 10am tomorrow until midnight for the west coast and islands, south west and north east Scotland, and Orkney and Shetland.

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) warned of an “unusual and dangerous combination of tide, storm surge and inshore waves” because the storm coincided with high tides.

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It said there was a risk of coastal flooding, with flood warnings issued for the Churchill barriers, connecting Mainland with South Ronaldsay on Orkney, and the north east Orkney island of Sanday.

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Lesser flood alerts cover the whole of Scotland apart from Lothian and the Borders.

A Sepa spokesperson said: “There is a risk of coastal flooding to all coastal areas. The highest risk is around high tides from midday Monday through to Tuesday afternoon.

“There is a flooding risk to coastal road and rail routes.”

CalMac has cancelled all sailings today on its Oban-Barra, Oban-Colonsay, Oban-Coll/Tiree, Skye-North Uist, Mallaig/Oban-South Uist, Mull-Iona, Mallaig-Small Isles and Mallaig-Skye routes.

Stena Line said some of its Cairnryan-Belfast sailings were in doubt.

Met Office chief meteorologist Frank Saunders, said: “It’s going to be particularly windy across the western half of the UK, with gusts reaching 60-70mph along Irish Sea coastlines, the west of Scotland and perhaps some English Channel coasts - maybe even 80mph in a few exposed places.

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“This is likely to cause some disruption to sea, road and air travel.

“As well as strong winds, there will be large coastal waves in western areas, so bear this in mind before heading out in these regions.”

He said for the rest of the week “it looks like it’s going to stay very unsettled, with the potential for further disruptive weather in places.”