Storm Amy killed three people and toppled infrastructure, leaving tens of thousands without electricity across multiple countries.
Irish authorities reported a man died in Letterkenny on Friday from weather-related causes.
French officials confirmed two men died—one from a fallen tree, another while swimming near Étretat.
Amy disrupted roads, railways, and ferries across the UK, Ireland, and Scandinavia with heavy rain and violent winds.
France and Belgium Grapple with Severe Gusts
Northern France issued an orange alert as winds reached 131 kph on the coast and 110 kph inland.
Storms cut electricity for 5,000 Normandy homes, though some power was later restored.
Belgium recorded gusts above 100 kph and declared a Code Orange warning nationwide.
Officials closed breakwaters in Ostend and opened emergency hotlines for fire service support.
Scandinavia Battles Flooding and Power Outages
Norway suffered 120,000 households without electricity as downed trees blocked over 100 roads in western regions.
Meteorologists predicted 100 millimetres of rain in twelve hours across Vestfold and Telemark.
Sweden issued multiple orange and yellow warnings as hurricane-force gusts struck northern Halland and coastal areas.
Amy, the Atlantic-born remnant of Hurricane Humberto, left destruction in its wake across northern Europe.