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Heatwave: England records driest July since 1935

England recorded just 35 per cent of its average rainfall for the month.

Saphora Smith
Climate Correspondent
Monday 01 August 2022 10:33 EDT
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A near empty Dowry Reservoir close to Oldham.
A near empty Dowry Reservoir close to Oldham. (PA)

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This July was the driest July for England since 1935, and the driest July on record for east anglia, southeast and southern England, according to the Met Office.

England recorded just 35 per cent of its average rainfall for the month.

Last week, the Met Office said that up to 26 July it had been the driest July in England since 1911 with only 24 per ent of the amount of rain normally expected in an average July.

The overall picture at the end of the month comes after the National Infrastructure Committee warned that ministers must introduce a national hosepipe ban and mandatory water metering to tackle the threat of drought. Last week, the National Drought Group held an emergency meeting amid concern that a drought could be announced if hot, dry weather persists.

High pressure pushed much of the rain into the northwest of the country, meaning temperatures built elsewhere across the UK. Overall the country saw around 56 per cent of its average rainfall for July, making in the driest July in over 20 years - since 1999.

Wales recorded 53 per cent of its average rainfall for the month, while Northern Ireland 51 per cent and Scotland 81 per cent.

Southern England recorded its driest July on record, with data beginning in 1836.

“July 2022 has been a significantly dry month for Southern England, only 10.5mm of rain has been provisionally recorded on average, less than the previous record of 10.9mm set in 191,” said Mark McCarthy, of the National Climate Information Centre. “The dominant weather pattern for the month has only allowed interludes of rain into northern areas of the UK, with areas further south largely getting any rainfall from isolated and fleeting showers in a month that will ultimately be remembered for extreme heat.”

The country exceeded 40C for the first time in July, with a new record high temperatures measued in Coningby, Lincolnshire. Wales also recorded a new all-time record of 37.1C at Hawarden, as did Scotland with the mercury hitting 34.8C in Charterhall.

Average maximum temperatures for July in England were 23.5C, some 2.3C higher than average, according to the Met Office, with average temperatures in the UK higher than average for every month so far this year.

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