Storm Amy killed three people across Europe while tearing through infrastructure and leaving tens of thousands without power.
Irish police reported a man died in Letterkenny on Friday in a weather-related incident.
French authorities confirmed two men died, including one struck by a fallen tree and another while swimming near Étretat.
Storm Amy disrupted road, rail, and sea travel across the UK, Ireland, and Scandinavia with heavy rain and strong gusts.
France and Belgium Bear the Brunt
Northern France issued an orange alert as gusts reached 131 kph along the coast and 110 kph inland.
Authorities reported 5,000 Normandy homes lost electricity, and the outage continued sporadically throughout the day.
Belgium felt wind speeds over 100 kph, prompting a nationwide Code Orange warning and closure of Ostend breakwaters.
Officials activated emergency lines for non-urgent requests to fire services as Amy caused local damage.
Scandinavia Faces Floods and Power Loss
Norway suffered 120,000 households without power, blocked roads, and downed trees, mainly in Trøndelag, Agder, and Vestland.
Meteorologists forecast up to 100 millimetres of rain in twelve hours along Vestfold and Telemark.
Sweden recorded hurricane-force gusts off northern Halland, prompting multiple orange and yellow alerts across southern and central regions.
Amy, the remnant of Hurricane Humberto, continued moving across northern Europe, leaving widespread disruption in its path.
