Almost 200 engineers deployed to Northern Ireland following Storm Éowyn

Hundreds of thousands of properties were left without power on Friday
Almost 200 engineers deployed to Northern Ireland following Storm Éowyn

By Jonathan McCambridge, PA

Nearly 200 electricity engineers have been deployed to Northern Ireland from other parts of the UK to assist with the operation to restore power to customers following Storm Éowyn.

The major storm on Friday led to hundreds of thousands of customers being left without electricity in the region.

By Tuesday, NIE Networks said 43,000 customers remain without power.

The company has said it may be February 3rd before power is restored to all homes.

As part of the effort to help with repairing the network, engineers have arrived in Northern Ireland from across the UK.

 

Lawrence Slade, chief executive of Energy Networks Association, said: “As other network operators return to normal operations, additional staff and equipment are being freed up and sent from Scotland, England and Wales to Northern Ireland to with the reconnection efforts there.

“This is in addition to more than 1,000 staff based locally at NIE Networks who have been working around the clock since the storm hit.

“Nearly 200 staff have been redeployed to Northern Ireland to date, in addition to helicopters, drones, generators and replacement parts from stockpiles in other parts of the UK.

“More people and equipment are expected to be sent over today and later this week.

“Everyone is working flat out to and reconnect customers.

“This is a huge team effort from every network operator across the UK, Ireland and further afield.”

NIE Networks, Northern Ireland’s energy network provider, said power had now been restored to 242,000 properties.

People clearing damage by fallen trees
People clearing damage by fallen trees (NIE Networks/PA)

Stormont’s Communities Minister Gordon Lyons has announced £1 million (€1.19 million) in funding to help those who are affected by the aftermath of the storm.

Mr Lyons said: “Storm Éowyn has caused devastation and my primary concern is the safety and well-being of all those affected, particularly children, the elderly and people with vulnerabilities.

“Over the weekend I activated the non-flooding scheme of emergency financial assistance (SEFA) to ensure immediate, on-the-ground with community assistance centres operating across every council area.

“Today I am extending the scheme and have ring-fenced funding of up to £1 million for outreach services, delivered in partnership with councils and the community and voluntary sector, to ensure the right s are in place in the right way for those most in need.”

Northern Ireland Water has said around 300 properties are experiencing a loss of water supply.

A spokesperson said: “We can give the assurance that we won’t stop until all properties are back on supply. We are a 24/7 business and that work will continue day and night until water supplies return to normal.”

It said that bottled water is available to customers at a number of public buildings across Northern Ireland.

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