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Image of strong and gusty weather in Athboy, near Navan in Co Meath, yesterday ABBZZAA on X

'More visual evidence needed' in wake of reports of tornado affecting Louth and Meath

Alan O’Reilly of Carlow Weather said there is a risk that it was a tornado based on weather readings and eyewitness accounts.

THERE ARE REPORTS of a tornado having struck counties Louth and Meath yesterday during Storm Isha.

Storm Isha has now passed but tens of thousands of people have been left without power.

The storm also had a significant impact on travel and there are also reports it brought a localised tornado.

However, Met Éireann said it is difficult to classify yesterday’s weather event across counties Louth and Meath as a tornado without visual evidence.

A Met Éireann spokesperson told The Journal that the weather conditions last night could have caused possible tornadoes in some areas, but added that “without visual evidence we can’t say for certain if it is the case for the incident in counties Louth and Meath”.

“For now, we don’t have any verified or valid evidence that tornadoes occurred anywhere in Ireland yesterday or last night,” added the Met Éireann spokesperson.

Alan O’Reilly of Carlow Weather also told The Journal that it is “very hard to say for certain without having visual evidence”.

However, O’Reilly said some of the eyewitness accounts support the theory that there was a tornado.

O’Reilly’s Carlow Weather is well-known for tracking Ireland’s weather, and he has a large social media following on the back of this. 

He told The Journal that he received reports of something suspect between Ardee in Co Louth and Navan in Co Meath.

“I received a few reports at around 6.20pm yesterday,” O’Reilly told The Journal.

“The rainfall radar does show intense rainfall at the time, and the lightning detector did show lightning in the area as well.

“So it does look like there was a thunderstorm in the area at the time, which does support the risk of a tornado, but it’s still very hard to know whether it was or wasn’t.”

Met Éireann notes that “Ireland is not immune to tornadoes” and states that there are around ten a year in Ireland.

Met Éireann’s website remarks: “Even if they are sometimes referred to as ‘mini-tornadoes’, they are still tornadoes.”

Meanwhile, TORRO (The Tornado and Storm Research Organisation) issued a warning yesterday that Ireland is at risk of tornadoes.

O’Reilly of Carlow Weather also noted “one eyewitness account that water was lifted up off the ground into the air”.

“This would be evidence that there was rotation,” said O’Reilly, “which is what we look for in terms of trying to classify whether it was a tornado or not.

“You look for evidence to show rotation, rather than just strong, sudden gusts because you can get them during thunderstorms as well.

“The unique part of a tornado is the rotation in the wind, but there is a risk that it was a tornado based on the reports that I got,” said O’Reilly.

Meanwhile, O’Reilly told The Journal that there’s been an increase in the number of tornadoes in recent years, he added that it’s “also the fact that people are now reporting them on social media, and people sharing images and videos during and after has made them more high profile”.

However, he added: “We’ve always had them but certainly the warmer weather and the amount of thunderstorms that we’ve had in the last 12 months does support there being more tornadoes.”

O’Reilly also remarked that localised tornadoes seen in Ireland are generally the same as those eye-catching ones seen in countries such as the United States, “but just smaller and short-lived”.

-With additional reporting from Órla Ryan

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14 Comments
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    Mute Finn Barr
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 12:35 PM

    Nothing compared to the intensity of the famous Clones Cyclone years ago in Co Monaghan.

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    Mute Don Johnson
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 12:56 PM

    At 6.08 near Athboy there was a sudden intense wind and rain that ripped off many of our roof tiles and our guttering and numerous trees fell in the area.5 minutes later it was almost calm again.

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    Mute shane tighe
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 1:56 PM

    I was driving down from the club finals in Croke park yesterday. Just after we came off the M6/M4 junction near Miltownpass the we drove tru about 3 minutes of very sever gusting winds and torrential rain. visibility was extremely poor, traffic came to a complete stop on the motorway and we put the hazards on and went into the hard shoulder. Cleared up again quickly after intense squall. Worst driving conditions i’ve ever encountered in Ireland.

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    Mute Laois Weather
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 12:28 PM

    The video says Athboy which is over near the Westmeath border. Did this suspected tornado kick off in Athboy and head for Ardee? If so, thats quite a range of almost 25 miles.

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    Mute J M
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 12:30 PM

    geoengineered weather. Search

    Last September, researchers in the UK launched a high-altitude weather balloon that released a few hundred grams of sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere, a potential scientific first in the solar geoengineering field, MIT Technology Review has learned.

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    Mute The Big Baba
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 12:39 PM

    @J M: I forgot that storms didn’t exist before last September.

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    Mute CORMAC O DALAIGH
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 12:25 PM

    More Athbouy.

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    Mute Rover
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    Jan 23rd 2024, 1:55 AM

    I was caught in this event at Rathkenny church cross about 6:10pm Sunday evening. I missed right turn as visibility was zero. There was lightning several times but just the howl of wind, no thunder. I basically had to stop in the middle of the road, it wasn’t just rain, it was like smoke been fanned at a million miles an hour. Just as I reversed my car to go left a tree fell right in front of the car from the church yard. It was like no thunderstorm I ever experienced and I’m lucky I got out of it in one piece

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    Mute P. V. Aglue
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    Jan 22nd 2024, 4:59 PM

    The next one could be a sharknado! Art image eating life and all that stuff

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    Mute Tony G
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    Jan 23rd 2024, 5:47 PM

    Ah, its lovely out

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