 A powerful storm in northwestern Europe has killed at least one person in France and left over 1.2 million people without electricity. French energy supplier Anadis has stated that most of those left without power are in northwestern region of Brittany. The power cuts have been caused by the fallen trees and electricity pylons uprooted as a result of storm siren that is one of the strongest storms in decades. The person who was killed was hit by a falling branch while driving, according to the French transport minister Clement Bonne, the speed of winds in northwest of France exceeds 120 km per hour, with gusts at hurricane-force levels of more than 200 kmh in the Department of Finistair. The storm has also hit the British Isles and Channel Islands, where red alert warnings are in place. We are a bit worried because there is a tree that has fallen on the highway, so this morning we took two hours for a journey that lasts 30 minutes, that's why we missed our train, and we were put on a late-night train, and so the correspondences, that's it. What it means is an idea in France, it's the first time, normally it's a tropical thing, but it has reached the French schools and it's in France, which means that normally I hear graphically speaking, but it must be much more remote. But it's so much more important in the planet, how do you want such a thing not to happen in France, so that there is no more fish in the ocean? And all this is the man who is paying what he did, simply. It's a concern, I'm not talking about an concern where the wind is going to take me or where the wind is going to fall on me. No, I'm not alone, we are a group of individuals who live on this land, you see, the most concern is because we are currently living now, the wind is going to blow us away, but what is important is what is going to come for our children, for the future.