
Mapped: Where thunderstorms are set to hit the UK today under Met Office weather warnings
People in almost all of the country have been told to prepare for heavy downpours at the beginning of the week, as the Met Office issues yellow weather warnings.
There are now three weather warnings in place on Monday for either rain or thunderstorms.
An amber weather warning for rain was in place overnight for the east of Northern Ireland brining 'impactful' downpours until 8am. The region remains under a yellow warning for rain until 6pm on Monday evening.
Meanwhile, parts of England and Scotland could see 20-40mm of rain in just two hours on Monday.
From 3am until 9pm on Monday, the south and east of England are covered by a yellow thunderstorm warning.
By 11am the same warning will be in place for the Midlands, northern England and Scotland.
Met Office forecasters warn that spray and flooding could lead to difficulties for drivers, possible road closures, and the risk that some communities may become cut off as a result.
Damage to homes and businesses is also possible from adverse weather conditions.
'We could see some locally heavy downpours, 20 to 40mm of rain is possible in a couple of hours,' Simon Partridge, a forecaster at the Met Office, said.
'That is potentially up to around half a month's worth of rain in a couple of hours in some places.
'You will see quite a lot of water on the roads and difficult driving conditions.
'Hopefully nothing more significant than that, it certainly won't be an issue for any of the rivers because they are quite low.'
It comes after the weekend brought multiple weather warnings, including two amber ones, to the UK.
There were six weather warnings in place on Sunday for either rain or thunderstorms.
An amber 'danger to life' alert came into force for London, parts of the south and south east of England on Saturday. Downpours were seen across the capital in what was the first amber warning issued for London since January 2 2024.
The rest of the week is set to be changeable, with showers likely on Tuesday and thundery downpours possible in the south-east of England on Wednesday.
Temperatures this week will be around average for the time of year, the national weather service said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
5 hours ago
- BBC News
Sewage leak at Aberdeen beach leads to swimming warning
People are being advised to avoid swimming and paddling at Aberdeen beach after sewage was discharged into the spill happened during a power outage at Nigg Waste Water Treatment Works, which also caused a power cut in the area on Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) said power had been restored but confirmed sewage was discharged into the sea close to Aberdeen harbour.A spokesperson said its "temporary guidance" was to avoid bathing in the area until it was satisfied that the situation had returned to normal.


Telegraph
11 hours ago
- Telegraph
England resume bid to crush India and win series at Old Trafford
10:20AM Hobbs and Root are England's greatest Landmarks were ticked off at regular intervals by Joe Root on day three at Old Trafford in his ascent to the summit of the highest Test run-scorers. In the morning session Root passed Rahul Dravid, of India,on 13,288 Test runs. He passed South Africa's Jacques Kallis, with all his technical perfection, on 13,289 runs, and thereby went into third place in the all-time list. In the afternoon, Root watched his fellow Yorkshireman Harry Brook run down the pitch and give his wicket away, the sort of donation that is given tax relief. Root put his head down, reached his 38th Test century, celebrated briefly then pressed on to 120, in order to overtake Australia's former captain Ricky Ponting and reach second place, behind the 200-Test Sachin Tendulkar alone on 15,921. Just before tea, with a specimen of his signature stroke, the steer behind point, Root did it and Old Trafford rang with the boo-like sound of 'Rooooot!' The Yorkshireman is second among the highest Test run-scorers since the format was launched in 1877. His only peer is Sir Jack Hobbs. Indeed, I could not separate Root and Hobbs at the top of the charts last October when I ranked the greatest 10 England batsmen of all time. 10:12AM Weather outlook According to the Met Office, it will be cloudy with a 30 per cent chance of rain from noon today, maximum temperature of 20C with the sun out in the hour before lunch and again from about 3pm. 10:02AM Preview Good morning and welcome to live coverage of the fourth day's play of England's fourth Test against India at Old Trafford which begins with Ben Stokes' side 186 runs ahead with three first-innings in hand and, with the captain himself at the crease, on the verge of clinching a victory that would secure the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy. Stokes starts on 77 and although he hasn't been as fluent as he has been at his best, often appearing as though he was batting with a chair leg, his bat all edges and toe, he must have his eye on a first Test century for two years to go with his first five-wicket return for eight years, cramp notwithstanding. Given that the pitch is now betraying signs of uneven bounce, taking turn and England's batsmen have given their bowlers a long rest for the first time in ages, England may well be confident of wrapping up victory today. Rishabh Pant will probably try his boy stood on the burning deck act again but scoreboard pressure, Ben Stokes, Jofra Archer, Brydon Carse and Chris Woakes will each fancy their chances of a wicket-taking spree on that pitch. India, by contrast, are in a hole of their own making because of their pusillanimous selection policy that has become a dirty habit on tour, packing their batting to the detriment of their bowling It wasn't just the sidelining of Kuldeep for the entire tour but the way Shubman Gill underused his best bowler, Washington Sundar, yesterday, persevering with the dibbly Shardul Thakur and the dobbly Anshul Kamboj who between them share figures of 29-1-144-1. Left-arm leg-spinners are such rare, rare finds and to ignore one who has taken 56 Test wickets at 22 borders on the negligent. Perhaps Gill and his batsmen can dig the selectors out by batting for the best part of two days to keep the series alive but the odds, pitch and momentum are all against them.


Daily Mail
12 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Man United Confidential: Extreme weather threatens to blow pre-season plans off course, Lord Coe looks to drum up investment in £2bn Old Trafford rebuild, and a date is set for Carrington's reopening
Thunderstorms wreaked havoc during the recent Club World Cup in the US, forcing a number of games to be delayed or even postponed, and they threatened to blow Manchester United off course on pre-season tour here as well. Ruben Amorim and his players avoided a torrential storm after training in Chicago on Thursday, but more wild weather across the eastern US forced United's flight from the city's O'Hare International Airport to New York to be delayed by two hours on Friday evening. United touched down in White Plains just before 10pm and transferred to their hotel in New Jersey ahead of Saturday's opening tour game against West Ham at the MetLife Stadium. At least Amorim and the squad were able to rest up in the Waldorf Astoria hotel in Chicago while they waited for the flight to be rescheduled, and took off very shortly after arriving at the airport. Reporters covering the tour were not so lucky and some didn't arrive in New York until the early hours of Saturday due to the storms, while others were re-routed around the weather system as far south as Nashville which added more than an hour to their journey. At least the forecast for Saturday is sunny and dry which means there should be no problems when United meet the Hammers in the Premier League Summer Series straight after Bournemouth take on Everton at the same venue. Coe's pitch to US investors The United team might only be spending 24 hours in the New York/New Jersey area, but that hasn't stopped the club from seizing an opportunity to wow potential investors in the £2billion Old Trafford rebuild. While the squad were preparing to fly to the Big Apple from Chicago, Lord Coe and club executives were attending a conference hosted by the British Consulate-General at Rockefeller Plaza on Friday afternoon called The Placemaking: Investing in Sports Real Estate in the UK. Although United are confident of securing public funding for the wider regeneration of the area around Old Trafford, private investment will be needed to fund the new 100,000-seater stadium itself. Lord Coe, who has led the stadium taskforce and is now chair-designate of the Mayoral Development Corporation set up to drive the project, and United chief operating officer Collette Roche addressed an audience of Wall Street investment banks and US financiers. United have taken inspiration from a number of American sports projects in their planning for what Sir Jim Ratcliffe envisions as the 'Wembley of the North' – not least the magnificent SoFi Stadium in LA and Chicago Bears' Burnham Park development. United chiefs are set to meet with the Bears next week once the team return to Chicago ahead of their second game against Bournemouth at Soldier Field. Date set for Carrington re-opening Old Trafford isn't the only rebuilding project under Ratcliffe's minority ownership. The club's Carrington training complex has undergone a £50m redevelopment and will officially re-open its doors at an opening ceremony on August 8. The upgrade has taken a year to complete and is aimed at providing a more elite environment for training and recovery. It has been finished ahead of schedule and will open 11 days before United kick off the new season at home to Arsenal. The first-team have continued to train at the women's and academy facility – as they did throughout much of last season – and use a gym set up on the indoor pitches, but they will shortly return to their redeveloped headquarters. Insiders tell Confidential that the women and youth teams will also benefit from the improvements made to their base while the men have been in situ. Focus on camera duo Job security has been in short supply since Sir Jim Ratcliffe and Ineos took over the day-to-day running of United, with no fewer than 450 redundancies to date. So it was refreshing to see camera operators Noel Grice and Keith Rheade celebrate 25 years of working for the club on Friday as captain Bruno Fernandes spent some time after training at Soldier Field to congratulate them on their achievement. The pair started in the same week a quarter of a century ago in 2000 and are still going strong on the club's pre-season tour.