England’s Scorching Summer Ties 2018’s as Hottest on Record

Provisional statistics from the UK’s Met Office show this was the hottest summer since at least 1884.

(Bloomberg) — Warm and dry weather conditions made this summer the joint hottest on record in England — tying with 2018 — and it was the first to see temperatures climb above 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit). 

Overall, the UK has seen just 62% of its summer rainfall, and mean temperatures 1.1°C above the average of 14.6°C, according to provisional statistics from the country’s Met Office. Provisional statistics show this was the fourth-warmest summer for the entire UK in a series that runs from 1884.

“For England to achieve its joint warmest summer takes more than extreme heat over a couple of days,” said Mark McCarthy a science manager at the National Climate Information Centre, in a statement. “We shouldn’t forget that we experienced some persistently warm and hot spells through June and August too.” 

Vast swaths of the country were put into “drought” status in August as its famously green lawns and fields turned yellow and the government allowed farmers to graze preserved lands to cope with shortages  of fodder and forage crops linked to the lack of rainfall. Man-made climate change made the heat wave that broke temperature records in July at least 10 times likelier, according to scientists. 

In England, the mean temperature for the summer was 17.1°C, the joint warmest ever recorded, and the sixth driest, with areas in the east more impacted. This was the eighth warmest summer for both Scotland and Wales, and the 12th warmest for Northern Ireland.

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