
Weather warning extended to more of UK as temperatures soar towards 35C
The UKHSA and Met Office said amber alerts now applied to the West Midlands and Yorkshire and the Humber regions as well as the East Midlands, South East, South West, London and the East of England until 9am on Wednesday July 2.
A yellow heat health alert has been issued for the North West region while there is no alert for the North East.
The UKHSA said: 'The current hot weather is forecast to continue through Monday and Tuesday, with the potential for temperatures as high as 35 degrees Celsius in some areas. Some parts of England are also forecast to experience overnight temperatures as high as 20-22C.'
, , , , or visit homepage.
Hashtags

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


Telegraph
40 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Flood warnings as storms mark end of heatwave
Storms and downpours could bring flooding across parts of the UK as the heatwave comes to an end. Just a day after Britain basked in the hottest day of the year, the Met Office has issued a yellow warning for thunderstorms for parts of south-east Scotland and north-east England. Heavy showers are expected to develop across parts of the region, including Fife, Durham and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, on Wednesday. Some areas are predicted to see up to 20mm of rain in an hour or less before the rain clears east into the North Sea later in the afternoon. The forecaster warned of surface water flooding because of the amount of rain falling in such a short space of time, with the warning in place until 6pm. Strong winds of up to 40mph could also develop, affecting areas including East Lothian and Edinburgh. It follows a period of sweltering weather across large parts of the UK this week The 34.7C recorded in St James's Park, Westminster, on Tuesday was the highest anywhere in Britain this year. Gritters were deployed on the roads of central Bedfordshire to stop them melting as temperatures soared, while a fire broke out in Herne Hill, south London, on Tuesday evening. NHS trusts also warned the public to stay indoors, wear sun cream and avoid exercise. The Met Office said the South East on Wednesday would experience some relief from the recent heat, with outbreaks of rain and a possibility of thunder in areas including Kent and Sussex. Temperatures will be in the low to mid-20C across England and Wales, with a maximum of 27C in the South East, still markedly higher than the long-term average for the region of around 23C but lower than Tuesday, which at 34.7C was the hottest day of the year so far. Scotland and Northern Ireland will see highs in the low 20s. Wednesday night is expected to be largely dry with clear spells but cloud will increase in the north-west, bringing outbreaks of rain to west Scotland by dawn. The South East will have a cooler night than recently, with a minimum temperature of 10C. The Met Office forecasts that Thursday will be dry and warm in the south. But it said the north-west would be unsettled, with scattered showers, clouds and isolated thunderstorms and stronger winds particularly in north-east Scotland in the afternoon. 'Heavy rain pushing in' Alex Burkill, a Met Office presenter and meteorologist, said heavy rain could cause some problems but temperatures would no longer be as 'oppressively hot'. He said: 'There will be some heavy rain at times in the east and that could cause a little bit of problems in a few places because there could be some thunder mixed in with it. 'The heavy rain that's pushing into parts of the South East – Kent, East Anglia, for example – some thunder is possible there, and also further north across parts of east England, maybe even the far south-east of Scotland could see some thunder as well. 'Otherwise, there will be a scattering of showers coming in across parts of Scotland to Northern Ireland, some sunny spells mixed in, but some fairly hefty showers possible. 'Across the bulk of England and Wales, it's looking like a largely fine day, some decent sunshine on offer and feeling pretty warm in that sunshine too. 'Temperatures are nowhere near as high as they have been of late. We're looking at highest temperatures probably around 26C – feeling warm but not as oppressively hot as it has been.'


Reuters
44 minutes ago
- Reuters
Heatwave across Europe leaves 8 dead as early summer temperatures hit records
LONDON, July 2 (Reuters) - Four people died in Spain, two in France and two in Italy as an early summer heatwave continued to grip much of Europe on Wednesday, triggering health alerts and forest fires and forcing the closure of a nuclear reactor at a Swiss power plant. Spanish officials said a wildfire in Catalonia had killed two people a day earlier, and authorities reported heatwave-linked deaths also in Extremadura and Cordoba. France's energy minister reported two deaths linked to the heat, with 300 others taken to hospital. Italy issued red alerts for 18 cities, while in Germany temperatures were forecast to peak at 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in some areas, making it the hottest day of the year. Two men over the age of 60 died in separate incidents on the beach in Sardinia from the heat, ANSA news agency reported. Weather forecaster Meteo France said red alerts remained for several areas of central France. The risks were greatest for vulnerable members of the population, and Catherine Vautrin, France's health and families minister, said authorities should remain vigilant. "In the coming days, we'll see the consequences, particularly on the most vulnerable, and I'm thinking particularly of the elderly," she said. Turkey, which battled blazes on several fronts forcing the temporary evacuation of about 50,000 people earlier in the week, said its fires were largely contained. Tuesday's fire in the Catalonia region of Spain destroyed several farms and affected an area stretching about 40 km (25 miles) before being contained, officials said. Italy, France and Germany warned of the risk of heavy storms due to excessive warming in unstable atmospheres. Violent storms in the French Alps late on Monday triggered mudslides, disrupting rail traffic between Paris and Milan. Swiss utility Axpo shut down one reactor unit at the Beznau nuclear power plant and halved output at another on Tuesday because of the high temperature of river water. Water is used for cooling and other purposes at nuclear power plants, and restrictions were expected to continue as temperatures are monitored. The extreme heat would likely impact the region's economic growth, which was expected to slow by half a percentage point in 2025, Allianz Research said in a report, likening the financial toll of one day with temperatures exceeding 32 C to half a day of strikes. Scientists say heatwaves have arrived earlier this year, spiking temperatures by up to 10 C (50 F) in some regions as warming seas encouraged the formation of a heat dome over much of Europe, trapping hot air masses. Greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels are a cause of climate change, they say, with deforestation and industrial practices being other contributing factors. Last year was the planet's hottest on record. "Extreme heat is testing our resilience and putting the health and lives of millions at risk," said Inger Andersen, executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme. "Our new climate reality means we can no longer be surprised when temperatures reach record highs each year." Allianz Research's warning of a dent in economic activity due to the heat rang true for some businesses. British baker Greggs (GRG.L), opens new tab warned on Wednesday its annual profit could dip below last year's levels as the unusually hot UK temperatures discourage customers from eating out. In Germany, people flocked to open air swimming pools and lakes to cool off, with many schools across the country closed. The fire brigade was tackling several forest fires in the eastern states of Brandenburg and Saxony. The upper floor of the Eiffel Tower in Paris was shut to visitors on Tuesday, while the iconic Atomium in Brussels, an atom-like structure made of stainless steel, closed early on Wednesday as a precaution, its third early closure this week. Spain experienced its hottest June on record this year, and France had its hottest June since 2003.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Warning of possible flooding from storms as heatwave comes to an end
Storms and downpours could bring flooding across parts of the UK as the heatwave comes to an end. A yellow warning for thunderstorms has been issued by the Met Office for parts of south-east Scotland and north-east England on Wednesday following the record-breaking heatwave. Heavy showers are expected to develop across parts of the region, including Fife, Durham and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, with some places seeing up to 20mm of rain in an hour or less before the rain clears east into the North Sea later in the afternoon. The forecaster warned of impacts from surface water flooding because of the amount of rain falling in such a short space of time, with the warning in place until 6pm. Strong winds of up to 40mph could also develop, affecting areas including East Lothian and Edinburgh. The South East will also experience some relief from the recent heat, with outbreaks of rain and a possibility of thunder in areas including Kent and Sussex. Temperatures will be in the low to mid-20C across England and Wales, with a maximum of 27C in the South East, still markedly higher than the long-term average for the region of around 23C but lower than Tuesday, which at 34.7C was the hottest day of the year so far. Scotland and Northern Ireland will see highs in the low 20s. Wednesday night is expected to be largely dry with clear spells but cloud will increase in the north-west, bringing outbreaks of rain to west Scotland by dawn. The South East will have a cooler night than recently, with a minimum temperature of 10C. The Met Office forecasts that Thursday will be dry and warm in the south. But it said the north-west would be unsettled, with scattered showers, clouds and isolated thunderstorms and stronger winds particularly in north-east Scotland in the afternoon. Alex Burkill, a Met Office presenter and meteorologist, said heavy rain could cause some problems but temperatures would no longer be as 'oppressively hot'. He said: 'There will be some heavy rain at times in the east and that could cause a little bit of problems in a few places because there could be some thunder mixed in with it. 'The heavy rain that's pushing into parts of the South East – Kent, East Anglia, for example – some thunder is possible there, and also further north across parts of east England, maybe even the far south-east of Scotland could see some thunder as well. 'Otherwise, there will be a scattering of showers coming in across parts of Scotland to Northern Ireland, some sunny spells mixed in, but some fairly hefty showers possible. 'Across the bulk of England and Wales, it's looking like a largely fine day, some decent sunshine on offer and feeling pretty warm in that sunshine too. 'Temperatures are nowhere near as high as they have been of late. We're looking at highest temperatures probably around 26C – feeling warm but not as oppressively hot as it has been.'