November 2012 flooding
2012 brought numerous flooding events to the UK. This case study focuses on one week in November when four periods of rainfall brought widespread flooding to many parts of the UK.Meteorological situation
Image 1 below shows the weather chart for 06:00 on 21 November 2012 with active weather fronts associated with low pressure over South West England.

Image 2 below shows rainfall totals in millimetres between 22:00 on 20 and 10:00 on 21 November 2012.


To the east of the cold front the isobars (lines of equal pressure) are packed closely together.

Rainfall totals associated with this frontal system were again unexceptional but the rain was falling on already saturated ground.
Image 5 below is the radar image at 16:00 on 22 November 2012 which shows a very intense line of rainfall running from South West England to South East Scotland.
South West England received another 20 mm of rain while parts of Cumbria and North Wales received 40 mm. Flooding was widespread across the UK with further travel disruption.
Wind speeds further added to the disruption with 60 mph gusts occurring widely at inland locations, 70 mph at coastal locations. Capel Curig in Wales had a gust of 86 mph.


Image 7 below shows the chart from 18:00 on 24 November 2012 with low pressure to the south of Cornwall.

A fourth period of flooding occurred on the 25 and 26 November with a further 30-50 mm falling across South West England, Wales and Northern England. Image 8 below shows the rainfall accumulations for the period 19 to 27 November 2012. This week brought four significant rainfall events in the space of a week with already saturated ground given no chance to recover.


This week brought numerous road closures due to flooding and the Exeter to London railway line was also flooded. When road and rail networks are affected people are unable to get to work and school. One particular event which made the national news was the Grand Western Canal breaching one of its banks near the village of Halberton in Devon. The canal drained into the surrounding land.

The last week of November is normally a very busy one for retailers. In 2012 some retailers had to close their shops due to flooding. Numbers of Christmas shoppers were down on normal figures due to shoppers having their travel plans disrupted. In addition if you'd woken up to a flooded house for the second time in a week you probably wouldn't be in the mood for Christmas shopping.
Weather really does affect the economy.
Download the November 2012 flooding casestudy (PDF, 2 MB)
Further information
2012: the year Britain's weather turned dangerous
Floods in UK: More than 800 homes flooded as storms hit
Grand Western Canal breach captured at Halberton, Devon



