Warning storm
Disruption warning as Storm Caroline
approaches
Warnings of disruption to road, rail and ferry
transport in Scotland have been issued as Storm
Caroline strikes and wintry weather is due in its
wake.
The Met Office has amber "be prepared" and
yellow "be aware" warnings in place for Thursday's
storm for Scotland.
Yellow warnings have been issued for snow, ice and
wind on Friday and Saturday for large parts of the
UK.
Scotland's transport minister, Humza Yousaf, said
the country faced "challenging conditions".
All schools on Lewis, Harris, Uist and Barra in the
Western Isles will be closed to pupils on Thursday
as a precaution.
Electricity company SSE Networks said that about
2,000 of its customers in the Western Isles had
been affected by power cuts.
In the Highland Council area, more than 50 schools,
which include nurseries, primary and secondary
schools, have been closed because of the weather.
The Scottish Environment Protection Agency has 10
flood alerts and 11 flood warnings in place for
areas including Ayrshire, Lochaber, Caithness and
Sutherland.
ScotRail Alliance said that because of the Met
Office forecast for winds gusting to up to 90mph in
some areas, it had suspended the following
services:
Aberdeen to Inverness
Inverness to Wick
Inverness to Kyle of Lochalsh
Glasgow Queen Street to Oban/Fort William/
Mallaig
Speed restrictions will also be in place for services
between Perth and Aberdeen and Perth and
Inverness as winds of up to 60 mph are expected
in areas those routes pass through.
ScotRail Alliance said this would mean trains would
be slower and services would be disrupted.
Rail services between Glasgow Central and Neilston
were disrupted for almost two hours after a
trampoline blew onto the track at Patterton in East
Renfrewshire.
'Challenging conditions'
Ferry operators Caledonian MacBrayne and
Northlink Ferries warned of cancellations and
disruption to routes on Scotland's west and north
coasts.
Due to concerns about large waves during the
storm , all personnel have been taken off the North
Sea platform Ninian Southern off Shetland and
production shut down.
CairnGorm Mountain snowsports centre near
Aviemore said it would be closed on Thursday
because of the expected high winds.
The Scottish government held a resilience meeting
on Wednesday to discuss the impact of the storm.
Mr Yousaf said: "We are facing some challenging
weather conditions in the next few days as a result
of Storm Caroline and we will be working closely
with our partners to try to mitigate the worst of
these and get information out to the public so that
they can plan their journeys.
"Disruption is very likely but we will make every
effort to recover the network as quickly as possible
when incidents do occur."
He said strong winds were likely to result in
restrictions and closures on road bridges on
Thursday morning.
Gritter tracker
Mr Yousaf added: "Moving forward, snow and ice
will become more of a feature of the storm and our
gritters and patrols will be out across the network.
"There is plenty of salt available and new vehicles
are being trialled to improve our response. Our
gritter tracker is back online so that people can see
where our gritters have been out in their area."
Graeme Macfarlan, commercial director of CalMac,
said disruption to ferry services on Thursday was "a
high possibility".
He said: "We would urge passengers who need to
travel, to allow extra time for their journey and to
keep track of the status of their sailing on the
website before setting out on their journey."
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