Storm Bram is set to barrel across the UK in the coming hours with Met Office forecaster Dan Suri saying: “Rain is an additional impact from Storm Bram, with the possibility of 100mm over higher ground”

Storm Bram is set to unleash 85mph gales and a massive downpour with 84 areas at risk.

New Ventura weather maps show parts of he South West, Dorset, Wales, Lancashire, Cumbria, south-west Scotland and Northern Ireland could face as much as 28mm of rain by 6am on Tuesday. Maps also indicated 85mph gales are forecast to whip around Wales, the South West and Cumbria by 12pm.

By 12pm, bands of heavy rain will move north of the border with the central belt of Scotland forecast to see some 15mm of rainfall. The Met Office issued multiple amber and yellow rain warnings across much of the country tomorrow.

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The entire of Northern Ireland is under a yellow wind warning with gusts expected to reach between 50mph and 70mph. Storm Bram will also unleash gusts in excess of 70mph in the Highlands, southern Scotland, Cumbria, Wales and the South West. Amber rain warnings are in place just north of Plymouth from 12am to 12pm on Tuesday.

There is a risk of flooding and damage to some buildings in the area. Another amber rain warning is also in place for southern Wales with fast flowing or deep floodwater likely around the same time period. In northwest Scotland, strong gales are forecast leading to an amber wind warning are in place from 4pm until 12am on Wednesday. Roads and bridges could lose with delays and cancellations expected.

Met Office Chief Forecaster, Dan Suri, said: “Storm Bram will bring a very wet and windy spell of weather, with very strong winds and further heavy rain which falling over saturated ground, could cause flooding impacts. Within the Amber wind warning over northwest Scotland, gusts of up to 90 mph could be recorded. More widely, gusts of 50-60 mph, and perhaps 70 mph in a few spots, are expected across Wales, southwest England and Northern Ireland.

“Rain is an additional impact from Storm Bram, with the possibility of 100mm over higher ground in the south of Wales and parts of Devon. This could require updates to warnings, so it’s important to stay up to date with the forecast in your area, as well as any flood warnings from your local environment agency.”

Affected regions

Highlands & Eilean Siar

Na h-Eileanan Siar

Highland

Strathclyde

Argyll and Bute

Inverclyde

North Ayrshire

Renfrewshire

Central, Tayside & Fife

Angus

Clackmannanshire

Dundee

Falkirk

Fife

Perth and Kinross

Stirling

Grampian

Aberdeen

Aberdeenshire

Moray

Highlands & Eilean Siar

Highland

North East England

Durham

Northumberland

North West England

Blackpool

Cheshire West and Chester

Cumbria

Lancashire

Merseyside

SW Scotland, Lothian Borders

Dumfries and Galloway

East Lothian

Edinburgh

Midlothian Council

Scottish Borders

West Lothian

Strathclyde

Argyll and Bute

East Ayrshire

East Dunbartonshire

East Renfrewshire

Glasgow

Inverclyde

North Ayrshire

North Lanarkshire

Renfrewshire

South Ayrshire

South Lanarkshire

West Dunbartonshire

Northern Ireland

County Antrim

County Armagh

County Down

County Fermanagh

County Londonderry

County Tyrone

London & South East England

Hampshire

South West England

Bath and North East Somerset

Bournemouth Christchurch and Poole

Bristol

Cornwall

Devon

Dorset

Gloucestershire

Isles of Scilly

North Somerset

Plymouth

Somerset

South Gloucestershire

Torbay

Wiltshire

Wales

Blaenau Gwent

Bridgend

Caerphilly

Cardiff

Carmarthenshire

Ceredigion

Conwy

Denbighshire

Gwynedd

Merthyr Tydfil

Monmouthshire

Neath Port Talbot

Newport

Pembrokeshire

Powys

Rhondda Cynon Taf

Swansea

Torfaen

Vale of Glamorgan

Wrexham

West Midlands

Herefordshire

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