After the storm has spoken, the sky rarely closes its book at once. Sometimes, it turns the page quietly, revealing that the story is not yet finished. In Portugal, as the marks left by depression Kristin are still being counted, meteorologists now point upward once more — not in alarm, but in recognition of a pattern that refuses to rest.
Weather specialists warn that a new polar jet stream is moving toward the Iberian Peninsula, reshaping atmospheric circulation and opening the door to successive frontal systems. Rather than a single event, what lies ahead is continuity: a corridor of instability that continues to guide rain and wind toward the country.
According to forecasts, these new fronts are expected to arrive in sequence, bringing periods of persistent rainfall and gusty winds described as coming “without truce.” While not every moment will be extreme, the lack of meaningful pauses between systems raises concern, particularly in regions already saturated by recent storms.
Meteorologists explain that the polar jet acts as an invisible highway in the upper atmosphere. When it strengthens and shifts southward, it allows depressions to form more easily and travel faster, limiting recovery time between weather events. In this configuration, Portugal remains directly in the path of Atlantic disturbances.
Rain is expected to be widespread, with higher accumulation forecast for the western and central regions. Winds may again intensify along the coast and in elevated terrain, while rough sea conditions are likely to persist. River basins and urban drainage systems continue under close monitoring as soil saturation increases vulnerability to flooding.
Authorities emphasize preparedness rather than alarm. Civil protection services remain on heightened awareness, and citizens are advised to follow official forecasts closely, particularly regarding travel, coastal activity, and river-adjacent areas.
The outlook suggests that this unstable pattern may persist until the indicated date highlighted by meteorologists, after which models tentatively point toward a gradual easing — though with caution, as long-range forecasts remain sensitive to small atmospheric shifts.
For now, the message from the sky is one of persistence rather than surprise. Winter, it seems, is not yet ready to loosen its grip. And as one storm fades into memory, another already gathers shape — not dramatic in its arrival, but steady in its insistence.
AI Image Disclaimer Visuals are created with AI tools and are not real photographs.
Sources Meteored Portugal IPMA (Portuguese Institute for Sea and Atmosphere) RTP Notícias SIC Notícias Lusa News Agency

