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Britain’s 32C heatwave will hit ‘everywhere’ in England except three places

A UK heatwave will fry everywhere in England this week – except for three places. Early maps from WX Charts, using Met Desk data, show temperatures rising nationally amid the prospect of a sweltering 32C heatwave in the coming days.

The scorching weather is likely to affect everywhere, the forecast agency warns, except for the south-west, north-east and north-west. Conditions look set to become increasingly warm, or even hot, across central, southern and eastern areas early next week, and some places may reach heatwave criteria.




It is uncertain how long this warmer weather will last, with a possible midweek breakdown. Exacta Weather’s James Madden warned: “Parts of the southern half of the country and particularly parts of central and southern England could see the hottest temperatures extending into the mid to high 30s (extreme) at the top from the middle of it. – until the end of the next working week.

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“Overnight temperatures will also struggle to drop below or even stay above 20C in some places during this period. After this next period of major heat and from the end of next week, it becomes increasingly favorable for a short period of somewhat cooler and unsettled weather. conditions before the next burst of heat for and around August 10.”

“We shouldn’t take anything away from the kinds of extreme temperatures that we can now fully expect to develop over the next 5-6 days at least because it will become very warm for many and much warmer than the current application. and TV forecasts, which are now growing by the day,” continued Mr Madden.

Meteorologist Greg Dewhurst warned that despite the warm weather, water temperatures could be much colder. “Be aware that at this time of year the water is still quite cold, around 16, 17, 18C. It’s not like the Mediterranean, where it’s much warmer,” he said.

Tom Morgan, a meteorologist at the Met Office, said the hot weather was because “the days are longer at this time of year, we’re only a month past the summer solstice and when it’s a sunny day the temperatures rise. because the earth retains more heat than it loses at night.”

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