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  • Met Office daily weather: Largely dry start to the week

    the afternoon, but these will be fairly light and fairly well scattered. And there should be a bit more in the way of sunshine between those showers, particularly compared to what we saw on Sunday. “The sun's still strong at this time of year. This is where we do see that sunshine, it will be feeling

  • Will UK thunderstorms become more extreme as our climate changes?

    causes thunder and lightning, how climate change may influence future storms in the UK, and what you can do to stay safe when they occur. What are thunderstorms? Thunderstorms form when warm, moist air rises rapidly into cooler air above, creating instability in the atmosphere. This process leads

  • metoffice_weatherwarriors_firstexplorations_22-04_weather-action-plan.pdf

    of weather? E.g. How does excessive heat, rain, cold or drought impact communities? • What can be done to manage these risks? E.g. Extended periods of dry weather could impact water supplies, while excessive flooding can cause water pollution and affect people’s ability to travel. How could we deal

  • Met Office daily weather: Starting the week on a wet note before temperatures rise again

    wind. But away from the cloud around coastal districts, there is some sunshine breaking through as well for Northern Ireland. Do watch out for a few showers around North Wales, parts of northwest England. And there is just some heavy rain lingering around Kent and Sussex first thing this morning

  • wiser_newsletter_0719.pdf

    also be interested in receiving this newsletter, do ask them to subscribe by emailing us. You can also keep up to date by viewing the Met Office and ACPC web pages, joining our LinkedIn group and following our Twitter hashtag #UKaidWISER. WISER East Africa High Impact Weather Lake System (HIGHWAY

  • Storm Claudia: Why names matter when weather turns wild

    example: named by the Spanish Meteorological Service AEMET, Claudia has brought amber warnings to parts of England and Wales for impactful rain. So why did we stick with the name Claudia, and how does the storm naming process work? Why Storm Claudia kept her name Storm Claudia was not named

  • Met office daily weather: Rainy and warm

    11:00 am on Tuesday, with the potential for 30–60 mm of rain and up to 80 mm in some areas. This follows an already wet period, increasing the risk of flooding and transport disruption. Overnight temperatures will remain high, with some places in England and Wales not falling below 14°C. What does

  • wiser-ewsa-testbed-daily-report---290124.pdf

    ). - Plotting impact areas on the template maps in powerpoint is very time-consuming, especially for the nowcasting groups. Is there any other software to do this? The synoptic summary of regional drivers can be made more systematic by defining a set of standard plots which can be pre-loaded every morning

  • April showers in shorter supply, but sunshine plentiful for many

    surpassed by sunnier Aprils in 2020, 2021 and 2025. April 2026 ranked as England’s third sunniest, Scotland’s sixth and Wales’s eight sunniest on record. How does spring so far compare with last year's record-breaking spring Many will remember spring 2025 as the warmest and sunniest on record for the UK

  • World Meteorological Day 2025: Early warning systems are imperative

    Scientific weather observations confirm this; news reports of damage caused by extreme rain or heat echo this as do already-constrained budgets required to deal with infrastructural damage, not to mention the price ordinary citizens pay in the form of trauma and displacement caused by chaos

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