• Mar. Jul 1st, 2025

fifebusinessjournal.co.uk

fifebusinessjournal.co.uk

Amber health alert issued as temperatures may hit 30C today in the UK

PorStaff

Jun 28, 2025
Festival-goers at Glastonbury on Friday. Pic: PA

Temperatures could reach 30C today as a new amber health heat alert begins another four days of hot weather across the UK. The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) alert – the second in two weeks – which covers London, the East Midlands, South East, South West, and East of England, will last until 6pm on Tuesday. A yellow heat health alert also covers Yorkshire and The Humber and the West Midlands over the same period. Find out the latest weather forecast. The previous amber health heat alert was issued for all parts of England on 19 June, the first time it had been used since September 2023. The UKHSA alerts are designed to warn health and social care workers about the impacts of hot weather on their services, including possible weather-related deaths in those aged 65 or with long-term conditions. They are not public weather warnings. Europe is also facing extreme weather – with wildfires breaking out just south of Athens on Thursday and authorities banning outdoor activity and non-essential travel for building and delivery staff on Friday. Meanwhile, storms in France and Germany have left at least three people dead, and authorities in Spain are warning residents to stay indoors due to hotter-than-normal temperatures. Heatwave criteria are likely to be met in a few places on Sunday and Monday, mainly across parts of central and eastern England. A heatwave is recorded when the threshold is met, varying between 25 degrees for most of the UK and 28 degrees for London and the South East, for three consecutive days. Robinson said there is some uncertainty over how quickly daytime temperatures will start to fall – but it is likely to happen from Tuesday. A rapid analysis from scientists at World Weather Attribution has found that June heatwaves in the South East – where there would need to be three consecutive days of temperatures above 28C – are about 10 times more likely due to climate change compared with the cooler pre-industrial climate. On Sunday, temperatures will pick up, northwestern Scotland may still see rain, but everywhere else will be warmer, with expected highs of 30-31C in the southeast. There will be a northwest and southeast split on Monday with a chance of it feeling wetter and windier across the northwest, but the heat will remain across central and southern regions. Temperatures reached highs of 29C in Coningsby, Lincolnshire, on Friday. It comes after 2023 brought the hottest June on record with heatwaves also seen in June 2017 and June 2020. Last Saturday was the hottest day of 2025 so far, with a provisional temperature of 33.2C recorded in Charlwood, Surrey.

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Por Staff

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