Cyclone Herwart was a
European windstorm that affected Southern
Denmark,
Germany,
Poland,
Austria,
Hungary and the
Czech Republic on 28–29 October 2017. Named by the
Free University of Berlin Meteorology Department,[5] the storm was an
extratropical cyclone formed as a secondary low to a more northerly centre of low pressure named Grischa coming southward from the
Svalbard Islands region, the latter splitting in two low-pressure areas late on 28 October.[6] The center of Herwart started rotating counterclockwise around the main low pressure area, passing over
Norway,
Sweden,
Latvia and then losing power while moving over western
Russia.[7]
In Denmark, which was hit on 28 October, the storm was named Ingolf.[8] In Hungary, the storm was named Nárcisz (Narcissus), a Hungarian female name whose
name day is on 29 October.[9]
Meteorological history
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The storm and rainfall caused death and destruction. Train connections were closed in Northern Germany,[11][12][13] and major bridges in Denmark were closed for traffic. Herwart caused disruption to the German energy market as the strong winds caused an over-supply of energy onto the German power grid. Prices for energy slipped into negative values as low as minus €83.06 per megawatt hour, with an average low of minus €52.11 (normal energy prices are €37 per megawatt hour). These values were the lowest since Christmas 2012. This can lead to a situation where Austria and Switzerland find it attractive to use the energy in their pumped storage reservoirs, where it can later be sold back to Germany.[14]
Herwart was not as strong as
Xavier which struck Germany earlier in October 2017.[15] Herwart is considered one of the strongest storms of the past 10 years in Germany, ranked in 8th place in the strongest storms there in the last decade, but not considered memorable when compared to the strongest storms such as
Kyrill (2007) and
Lothar (1999).[16] Herwart was responsible for the worst insurance losses in the Czech Republic since the storms Kyrill and
Emma (2008).[17]
^"Storm Herwart insured loss estimate rising, now EUR 300m: Aon". Artemis.bm - The Catastrophe Bond, Insurance Linked Securities & Investment, Reinsurance Capital, Alternative Risk Transfer and Weather Risk Management Blog. 3 November 2017. Retrieved 7 November 2017.