Colonel Mario Giuliacci’s last speech is dedicated to Hurricane Kirk. “It is still moving in the open Atlantic, in the next few hours it will begin its reverse crossing, from west to east, across the Atlantic, immersed in the intense westerly flow that constantly flows above this ocean at mid-latitudes”, you read it above meteogiuliacci.it. What should we expect? Will Italy end up in the crosshairs of this stormy system? “As it passes over relatively cold waters, it will inevitably lose some of its tropical cyclone characteristics and will therefore be downgraded to an extra-tropical cyclone, but it will still retain a lot of power,” the expert warned.
Already from the early hours of Wednesday 9 October, “the north of the Iberian Peninsula will be affected by the effects of Hurricane Kirk, where intense rains and very strong winds are expected”. In the second part of the day, then, the storm “will move”, continued Giuliacci. Where? Especially “in France, Belgium and the Netherlands”. Several countries will become Kirk’s target on Thursday 10 October: “It will bring a lot of rain and a lot of wind to Northern Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Scandinavia”. Italy, as the atmospheric physicist clarified at the end, will not feel its effects.
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