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A warm week, getting hot in places.

Temperatures will rise across much of the UK this week and it’ll get hot and humid in places on Friday and Saturday, before turning cooler on Sunday.

, where an easterly breeze will limit temperatures this week. This will mean places like Newcastle, Hull and parts of London could see maximum temperatures jump by as much as 10 degrees between Friday and Saturday.  Met Office Chief Meteorologist, Steve Willington, said: “It’ll be warm with sunny

factsheet_5-white-christmas_2022_2023.pdf

Christmas information for capital cities of the UK since 1960 is shown in the following table. A White Christmas has been indicated when sleet or snow is reported to have fallen on 25 December. Year London Cardiff Belfast Edinburgh 1960 - - - - 1961 - - - - 1962 - - Yes Yes 1963 - - - Yes 1964 Yes - Yes

News

The Great Escape

is likely to finish in the top five. Some like it hot (and sunny) When it comes to the perfect holiday temperature, the research revealed that the average British holidaymaker likes a warm 27 °C , with two-fifths (41%) often opting to travel abroad to get it. But with 193 days of 25-30 °C degrees

News

Hot and humid this weekend

Warm, humid air originating from the tropical Atlantic will bring a taste of summer warmth across much of England and Wales over the coming days with the hot weather extending into next week. With plenty of sunshine, temperatures are expected to widely climb into the mid to high 20°Cs with some

Sea-level rise Infographic-3-MM

increases under higher emissions scenarios, however projecting further into the future introduces more uncertainty. Projected ranges of sea-level rise at UK capital cities (nearest class A tide gauge location) at 2300 under RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 relative to a baseline period of 1981-2000. The lower number

Sea-level rise Infographic-2a-MM

greenhouse gas emissions continue to grow unmitigated. Each pathway results in a different range of global mean temperature increases and therefore different projections of sea-level rise over the 21st century. Projected ranges of sea-level rise at UK capital cities (nearest class A tide gauge location

Volcanic ash

The London VAAC process

The London VAAC has specialist forecasters who produce volcanic ash advisories and guidance products using a combination of data from observations and models.

Introduction The Met Office NAME dispersion model is initialised with both meteorological and volcanic eruption data. This includes winds, temperature, humidity, height of plume, size of ash particles and more. NAME is the standard dispersion model used by London VAAC, but data from other

News

Future extreme rainfall more extreme than first thought

, and the flooding in London in July 2021 is illustrative of the type of event we expect to increasingly see in future. The science of climate change predictions is just the start of the process. To enable mitigation and adaption actions to be taken, we need to understand climate change impacts. For example, cities

News

Reflecting on an historic spell for weather and climate

extreme hot spell were the overnight temperatures which also broke previous records by a large margin with Kenley Airfield, Greater London recording a minimum of 25.8°C beating the previous record by 1.9°C “At country and regional level the previous two days has also seen Wales and Scotland produce

publichealthlandcover_writeup.pdf

) Provide health and environmental outcomes National, local, city-specific (London) scenarios Citizens identifying ticks and location in environment Analysis of citizen science data Including GPS, app designs Evaluate impact of information Funding: INNOVATE UK, Partner: NHM Heat (also pollution?) sensors

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