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Warm September marks start of Autumn

for both the daily maximum and minimum average temperatures.   Northern Ireland had its joint-warmest September on record, with mean temperatures of 14.2°C matching 2006’s figure, in part because of some record breaking warm nights. Northern Ireland recorded their highest average minimum temperatures

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Joint-warmest September on record for UK

The UK had its joint-warmest September on record in a series which goes back to 1884 according to provisional Met Office statistics. The UK’s September 2023 mean temperature of 15.2°C puts it level with 2006’s record figure in statistics that have been ‘substantially influenced’ by the impact

ukcp18-guidance---how-to-use-the-cdf-and-pdf-plots.pdf

and CDF plots for UK on the UKCP18 User Interface. The full dataset is available from the CEDA Data Catalogue: note that this requires familiarity with handling large datasets. References Lowe JA, Bernie D, Bett PE, Bricheno L, Brown S, Calvert D, Clark RT, Eagle KE, Edwards T, Fosser G, Fung F

heavy-rainfall_flooding---june-2007---met-office.pdf

1914 UK 136.0 190 1 121.2 mm - 1980 England 145.9 241 1 121.2 mm - 1997 Wales 168.2 202 2 183.1 mm - 1998 Scotland 108.9 127 Not significant 153.9 mm - 1938 N Ireland 148.3 202 1 147.0 mm - 1931 England & Wales (*) 149.0 234 1 124.3 mm - 1998 England N 188.1 277 1 134.8 mm - 1980 England S 123.7 218 1

ukcp18-fact-sheet-temperature.pdf

. References Gohar G, Bernie D, Good P and Lowe JA, 2018. UKCP18 Derived Projections of Future Climate over the UK, Met Office. Available at https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/research/collaboration/ukcp/derived-projections OPEN ACCESS Lowe JA, Bernie D, Bett PE, Bricheno L, Brown S, Calvert D, Clark RT, Eagle

data-science-framework-2022-2027.pdf

). • Project(s) developing climate and weather services using machine learning approaches to add value through identifying relevant hazards, quantifying how hazards translate into risks and cascade through complex systems, and understanding/ learning the utility of this information for managing risks across

factsheet_18-weather-satellites_2023.pdf

/Cloudsat Sentinel 3 JASON HIMAWARI 8 (Japan) 140 °E COMS (South Korea) 128 °E GOES-E (USA) 75 °W METEOR FY-3 S-NPP GPM FY-2 (China) 105 °E METEOSAT 2nd generation (EUMETSAT) 0° METOP METEOSAT-IO (EUMETSAT) 57.5 °E Electro-L (Russia) 76 °E INSAT (India) 82 °E FY-2 (China) 86.5 °E Figure 1

WMO485titlepage

regions: Tropics 20°N to 20°S; Northern extratropics ≥20°N; Southern extratropics ≤20°S. Precipitation anomalies within standard regions: Tropics 20°N to 20°S; Northern extratropics ≥20°N; Southern extratropics ≤20°S. 3.1.2 Scores and diagrams to be produced for probabilistic forecasts: Reliability

UK Climate Resilience Programme additional resources

 is available to download from the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology website.  Journal Papers 1. CREWS-UK (Characterising and adapting to climate risks in the UK wine sector) Nesbitt, A., Dorling, S., Jones, R., Smith, D.K.E., Krumins, M., Gannon, K.E., Dorling, L., Johnson, Z. and Conway, D. 2022

upscaling-fillable-worksheet.pdf

the scaling strategy will aim to achieve 1.a: Dimensions of innovation scaling to perform Upscaling dimension(s) Notes 1.b: Scaling ambition questions Question Answer Notes a) What is being scaled? b) Where will it be scaled – who will use the service? c) When will it be scaled? © Crown copyright

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