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CSSP_city_pack_HULL_V2

Hull Heat Pack Cities can be impacted by a range of weather and climate hazards including extreme heat, heavy rainfall and sea level rise. The Heat Pack provides information on how extreme heat events in your city may change this century due to climate change, the impacts, and how to build

UK Climate Resilience Programme urban climate services

Council via Climate Ready Clyde Hull City Pack, working with Hull University Kirklees City Pack, working with Kirklees Climate Commission Leeds City Pack, working with Leeds City Council via iCASP Liverpool City Pack London City Pack, working with City of London Corporation Manchester City Pack

SPF City Pack_editable_template

HULL CLIMATE PACK INTRODUCTION This City Pack provides high level, non-technical summaries of climate change projections for an individual city or town. It uses scientific research to provide robust climate information to help decision makers plan for the future, enabling cities and towns to become

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

of stations which recorded their wettest June and have long series lengths. Some places also had their wettest any month on record, including the following long-running stations: Hull, Bradford and Sheffield. June 2007 - station precipitation values Station June 2007 % of 1961-1990 Series length

Dr Paul Burns

was awarded a PhD in modelling nocturnal atmospheric boundary layers from the University of Hertfordshire in 2015, following an MSc in Meteorology at the University of Reading. Previous to his research career, Paul worked as a Hydrographic Surveyor, mapping the seabed around the UK using hull-mounted

Most Tornadoes in one Day 23 November 1981

in a belt 200 - 250km wide and 400km long stretching from Anglesey across central, north and Eastern England with outbreaks in areas near Liverpool, Manchester Hull and Bimingham although most were in rural locations. Although most of the tornadoes were only F0 - F1 on the Fujita scale with a few

News

A warm week, getting hot in places.

, 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

News

Charting the UK's changing climate

of the changes taking place in UK climate over the last six decades. “The result of human-induced climate change in the UK is that higher temperatures are felt further north than they used to be. If you look at the average temperature for example, between 1991-2020 Hull has been warmer on average than

hot-spell-august-1990---met-office.pdf

Cardiff (Weather Centre) South Glamorgan 34.5 3 33.1 Bidston Merseyside 34.5 2 31.4 Hull Humberside 34.4 3 32.8 Sheffield South Yorkshire 34.3 3 33.5 Prestatyn Denbighshire 34.3 2 32.4 Boscombe Down Wiltshire 34.2# 3 33.3 Southport (Greenbank) Merseyside 33.9 2 32.0 Rothamsted Hertfordshire 33.8* 3 33.3

UK Climate Resilience Programme news

at the University of Hull.  It will be a celebration of the work of the UK Climate Resilience community, and a demonstration of the value of the programme’s research outputs. Find out more.  New embedded researcher cohort announced - November 2021 The UK Climate Resilience Programme announced a second

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