Three historic names from the Met Office’s 170-year history have been included in the new storm names list for the 2024/25 season.

James, Lewis and Mavis have all been included. James is named after Group Captain James Stagg, whose D-Day forecast was critical to the outcome of World War II. Lewis after Lewis Fry Richardson, who devised a theory to use maths and physics to make weather forecasts using computers, and Mavis after Mavis Hinds, who undertook pioneering work on the earliest Met Office computers.

The Met Office, Ashley, Bert and Conall will be the first three named storms by the group this season.

The Met Office and partners started naming storms in 2015. The list runs from early September to late August the following year to coincide with the start of autumn and the end of summer, when the likelihood of low-pressure systems and the potential for named storms increase.

Met Office Head of Situational Awareness Will Lang, who leads responses in times of severe weather, said: “This is the tenth year of us naming storms and we do it because it works. Naming storms helps to make communication of severe weather easier and provides clarity when people could be impacted by the weather.

“For Storm Babet, which brought exceptional rainfall to parts of eastern Scotland in October 2023, post event surveys suggest 97% of people within the amber and red warning areas were aware of the warnings and 89% of them took action as a result.

“This year, as we celebrate our 170th birthday, it’s great to be able to honour those who have had an impact on our long history of pioneering weather and climate science services.”

The group named 12 storms in the 2023/24 season, reaching the letter ‘L’ with Lilian on 22 August 2024. This is the furthest through the list the Western European naming group has got since storm naming was introduced in 2015.

Will said: “Storm seasons are highly variable in the UK, with some seasons seeing a low frequency of named storms, and others more. One reason there were so many storms last year was the position of the jet stream through much of autumn and winter, which brought a succession of low-pressure systems towards the UK which became named storms.”

Storm name list in full

Ashley

Bert

Conall

Darragh

Éowyn

Floris

Gerben

Hugo

Izzy

James

Kayleigh

Lewis

Mavis

Naoise

Otje

Poppy

Rafi

Sayuri

Tilly

Vivienne

Wren

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