2022/23 storm names announced

Storms are named when they could cause ‘medium’ or ‘high’ impacts.

Met Éireann, along with the UK Met Office and KNMI, the national weather services of the UK and Netherlands, have released the new list of storm names for the 2022-23 storm season.

Similar to previous years, each weather service has contributed names suggested by members of the public.

The list for 2022/23 is: Antoni, Betty, Cillian, Daisy, Elliot, Fleur, Glen, Hendrika, Íde, Johanna, Khalid, Loes, Mark, Nelly, Owain, Priya, Ruadhán, Sam, Tobias, Val and Wouter.

Since 2014 Met Éireann and the UK Met Office have been working together in a storm names partnership to help raise awareness of the potential effects of severe weather, and were joined by KMNI in 2019.

Storms are named when they could cause ‘medium’ or ‘high’ impacts in one of the partner countries and help provide consistent, authoritative messaging in times of severe weather.

The weather service that expects the severe weather to hit most names the storm, generally in conjunction with Orange/Red warnings. These warnings could be for wind, rain or snow or a combination of these.

Other groups in Europe also name storms and the agreed practice is that when any national weather service names a weather system all other weather services keep that name.

When a storm is an ex-hurricane, it retains the name given by the National Hurricane Center in Miami such as Ophelia (16 October, 2017).

Evelyn Cusack, head of Forecasting Division in Met Éireann, welcomes storm naming as an important tool in national weather services’ warnings arsenal.

She said: “The annual unveiling of the new storm names on 1 September creates greater public awareness and, crucially, during the winter when a storm is named for its potential Orange/Red impacts, it creates a more impactful public ‘call to action’ helping to save lives and property.

“During past storms, the public have responded positively to the advice given by experts and this new list of names will help us to prepare society for extreme weather events which is all the more important in our changing climate.”

On MET Éireann’s App users can subscribe to receive notifications for Met Éireann weather warnings for chosen counties up to three days ahead; advisories are issued up to seven days ahead.

The warnings page on MET Éireann’s website and app also displays weather warnings for Northern Ireland, issued by the UK Met Office. it provides a clear, authoritative one-stop shop for easy and reliable access to the latest weather warnings for the Island of Ireland.

Further background information about storm naming is available at met.ie/forecasts/storm-names.