UK and France Facing Severe Travel and Electricity Disruption

Storm Goretti has brought heavy snowfalls and the big freeze in both countries.

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Almost half a million left without electricity in western France.

 

The UK and France are facing severe travel disruption as Storm Goretti powers up, bringing snowfalls across many areas of the country and plunging temperatures.

A rare red wind warning has been issued by the Met Office for south-west England, while amber alerts for snow are in place in Wales, the Midlands and parts of northern England.

Airports and rail operators are taking precautions, with closures and widespread cancellations coming into effect this evening.

Channel Island airports close for Storm Goretti

The government of Jersey has urged people to remain at home between 8pm and midnight, and stay away from the coast, after a red wind warning was issued.

“Airlines will be contacting affected passengers with advice on how to rearrange their travel,” the airport says.

Loganair, the UK’s largest regional airline, has grounded flights to Orkney, Shetland and Lewis in Scotland, as well as the Channel Islands.

The carrier is offering passengers the option to rebook without charge.

“You can choose to re-book on an alternative flight up to 14 days from your original travel date. There will be no change fee or difference in fare payable. If a seat is available on an alternative flight, you can transfer your booking to that flight,” it said.

Most of the other airports in the UK say they will be operating as normal today and tomorrow.

London Gatwick and London Heathrow airports are experiencing some delays as well as cancellations of flights to and from Ireland, the Channel Islands and a few European destinations.

Trains cancelled and delayed across the UK

Rail services have been significantly impacted by heavy snowfall, wind and rain.

Train schedules across Cornwall were cancelled this morning.|

"Replacement road transport will not be available as road conditions are expected to be at risk," National Rail has warned travellers.

Elsewhere in England, operator CrossCountry is cutting back its service on some routes, including between Manchester and Birmingham, Reading and Birmingham, and Bristol and Birmingham.

The East Midlands Railway network has halted trains on the line between Sheffield and Manchester until the start of service on Saturday.

From 7pm, London Northwestern Railway and West Midlands Railway will operate a reduced timetable.

In Scotland, LNER services between Aberdeen and Edinburgh are gradually returning to normal after several cancellations.

Across the Channel, France’s national rail operator SNCF has suspended several services this evening, with Storm Goretti expected to bring strong wind gusts to western France, reaching up to 160 km/h on the Normandy coast.

In western France, almost half a million customers were left without electricity, as the storm brought violent winds, coastal flooding and widespread disruption, according to French electricity grid operator Enedis.

Power outages were reported across several western regions as strong wind gusts battered the country from Thursday night into Friday morning. In the Manche department, a gust of 213 kilometers per hour was recorded in the town of Gatteville, Belgian broadcaster BFMTV reported.

The storm also knocked out telecommunications infrastructure, leaving more than 400 mobile network antennas offline across Normandy,

Ferries opt for early sailing or cancellation

Ferries are also being affected by the powerful winds.

Irish Ferries has brought forward some sailings between Holyhead and Dublin this evening and this morning.

Several of its Dover-Calais services today and tomorrow are delayed or cancelled.

Brittany Ferries has cancelled its 8.30am sailing from Poole to Cherbourg on Friday 9 January.

Northlink, which operates ferries between mainland Scotland and Orkney and Shetland, warns of “the possibility of disruption to our services from Friday 9 January 2026 through to Monday 12 January 2026”.

SOURCE-Euronews

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