The storm was responsible for a total of 33 deaths across Europe, including Britain, the Netherlands, France, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Poland, Switzerland and Sweden.
[8] The worst wind related damage was experienced across Wales, the English Midlands and into the Netherlands and onto western Germany.
[10] The strong winds caused damage from Frankfurt to Hamburg in Germany, where there were eleven fatalities as a result of the storm.
Damaged power lines and tracks blocked by falling trees affected rail services throughout Europe, while on the roads, commuters faced long delays.
[11] The Eurostar service between London and the continent was halted due to a technical problem, as salt from the sea picked up by the wind was deposited on the isolators that connect the trains to the power cables.
[11] In the far north, a ferry carrying 80 passengers was stranded for 80 hours after it failed to land at Lerwick in the Shetland Isles.
[11] Jeanett's winds gusted up to 160 km/h (100 mph; 87 kn), causing widespread damage to the electricity distribution network in England and Wales.
Supplies were not fully restored in the worst affected area, served by EDF Energy's subsidiary company 24seven, until Tuesday 5 November, 10 days later.
[12] The catastrophe risk modeling firm EQECAT estimated the insured loss for "Jeanette" to be in excess of €1 billion.