GREAT STORM OF 1987

Satellite image of the powerful storm

The 'Great Storm of 1987' occurred on October 15 and 16, 1987, when an unusually strong weather system caused winds to hit much of the south of England. It was the worst storm to hit England since the Great Storm of 1703 (284 years earlier) and was reportedly responsible for the deaths of 23 people.
According to the Beaufort scale of wind intensities, the storm had sustained winds of hurricane force, although there are some who would use the term European windstorm to describe the system as the term ''hurricane'' refers to tropical cyclones originating in North Atlantic, North and Northeastern Pacific, or the Central North Pacific. The storm had winds equivalent to a Category 2 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. Although the storm was declared a rare event, expected only to happen on average every several hundred years, the Burns' Day storm hit the UK in January 1990, less than three years later and with comparable intensity.

Contents
Origins
Effects
Michael Fish controversy
See also
References
External links

Origins


The storm originated from a cold front in the Bay of Biscay that met with cold air coming from the north. When the two systems collided, a severe low pressure front developed with a central pressure of 958 mbar (comparable to a Category 3 hurricane, which typically has a central pressure between 945 and 964 mbar). How such a low pressure system developed on this particular occasion has not been fully explained. One theory, not established or generally accepted, is that it might have been a result of the jet stream coming from America in the wake of Hurricane Floyd (1987) and exceptionally warm weather of the Bay of Biscay.

Effects


The storm made landfall in Cornwall before tracking northeast towards Devon and then over the Midlands, going out to sea via The Wash. The strongest gusts, of up to 100 knots, were recorded along the southeastern edge of the storm, hitting mainly Essex and Kent.
The storm caused substantial damage over much of England, downing some 15 million trees (including six of the seven famous oak trees in Sevenoaks[1] and most of the trees making up Chanctonbury Ring), blocking roads and railways and leaving widespread structural damage to buildings. Several hundred thousand people were left without power, which was not fully restored until more than two weeks later. Local electric utility officials later said they lost more wires in that single storm than they had in the preceding decade. At sea, as well as many small boats being wrecked, a ship capsized at Dover, a Sealink cross-channel ferry, the ''MV Hengist'', was driven ashore at Folkestone, and the transmitting mast of the Radio Caroline radio ship the ''Ross Revenge'' sustained apparently minor damage only to collapse in a force 10 gale the following month. In addition to the 19 lives lost in England, at least four more died in France. The storm cost the insurance industry £2 bn; this makes it the second most expensive UK weather event.[2]
The lack of reporting during this storm led to reforms in the way the Met Office reports severe weather, leading to substantially more warnings being issued in the future, the deployment of improved tracking devices and an increase in the depth of the simulations supported by the purchase of an additional Cray supercomputer. Warnings for the Burns' Day storm 3 years later were accurate and on time.
There are theories that effects from the Storm were a contributing cause of the Black Monday stock exchange collapse.

Michael Fish controversy


BBC meteorologist Michael Fish drew sharp criticism for reporting several hours before the storm hit, in seemingly flippant fashion: ''"Earlier on today, apparently, a woman rang the BBC and said she heard there was a hurricane on the way… well, if you're watching, don't worry, there isn't"''. In fact his comments about a hurricane had nothing to do with the UK; they referred to Florida, USA, and were linked to a news story that immediately preceded the weather bulletin, but have been so widely misreported that the British public remain convinced they referred to the approaching storm. According to Michael Fish, the woman in question was actually a colleague's mother who was about to go on holiday in the Caribbean and had called regarding the hurricane Floyd to see if it would be safe to travel.[3]
Fish went on to warn viewers in the UK to "batten down the hatches", saying it would be "very windy" across the south of England, but predicted that the storm would move further south along the English Channel and the British mainland would escape the worst effects. The remainder of his warning is frequently left out of re-runs which only adds to the public's misrepresentation of his forecasting that evening.
His analysis has been defended by weather experts. In particular, the lack of a weather ship in the southwest of England, due to Met Office cutbacks, meant the only manner of tracking the storm was by using satellite data (automatic buoys had not been invented at the time). The storm was also a highly unusual occurrence and therefore very difficult to predict. Even if Fish had been talking about the approaching storm, he would still have been technically correct in his statement, as the storm of 1987 was neither tropical or post-tropical in nature, and therefore could not possibly be a hurricane.

See also



List of natural disasters in the United Kingdom

Black Monday (1987)

Great Storm of 1703

European windstorm

Jet stream

References


1. Sevenoaks becomes Oneoaks
2. UK storm payout 'may hit £350m'
3. Michael Fish and the 1987 Storm

External links



Met Office report

Michael Fish and the 1987 Storm

Picture of the Sealink car ferry the ''MV Hengist'' beached at Folkestone

BBC news report including video

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