Around 35,000 properties in Scotland were still without power on Saturday evening, a spokesperson for the Scottish Government said.
People in Wales have been warned to brace for further weather disruption in the coming days. The Met Office said heavy rain, strong winds and wintry showers could bring flooding and travel delays in the wake of Storm Eowyn.
Storm Éowyn was "probably the strongest storm" to hit the UK in at least 10 years, the Met Office has said, with wind gusts in excess of 100mph (160km/h).
One person has died in Ireland and hundreds of thousands of homes are without power in the UK as Storm Éowyn brought record-breaking wind gusts. The man died when a tree fell on his car in County Donegal, Gardaí (Irish police) said.
Southwesterly then westerly winds will rapidly increase from west to east Friday mid-morning onwards into the afternoon, with peak gusts of 80-90 mph fairly widely and perhaps up to 100 mph along exposed western coasts.
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Storm Éowyn has claimed two victims after wind speeds in the UK hit 100mph - the Met Office still has several weather warnings in place this evening as there continues to be a 'danger to life'
Storm Éowyn claimed its first victim on Friday after reports one person had died, with red "danger to life" warnings issued by the Met Office and wind speed records smashed with gales of 114mph record
A THIRD red warning has been issued as Storm Eowyn smashes into the UK at 114mph – with flights cancelled and millions told to “stay at home”. Rail services have also been axed,
Snow and ice warnings have been issued as a frosty blast strikes parts of the UK, in the wake of Storm Eowyn’s record-breaking wind speeds. Travel chaos is expected to continue into the weekend after at least 1,070 flights were axed and 150,000 passengers affected on Friday.
The storm had knocked out power to more than half a million utility customers by early Friday as it moved across Ireland.