UK
braced for yet more flooding with 76 serious flood warnings in place,
including 13 in already-saturated Yorkshire
Majority
of flood warnings in York and surrounding villages
2
January, 2013
Heavy
rain and strong winds continued to lash England and Wales yesterday,
bringing gusts of up to 60mph and flooding to agricultural land. As
fierce storms pounded South-west and South-east England and the
Midlands, the Environment Agency issued 17 flood warnings, and
expressed particular concern about the rising levels of the river
Severn.
An
incident room has been set up in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, which
sits at the confluence of the Severn and the Avon and was one of the
worst-affected towns in the floods of July 2007. Environment Agency
spokeswoman Laura Gottelier said there had been localised flooding of
agricultural land and roads, but properties appeared to have been
spared. "It seems to be easing, but we're not stepping back any
of our operations just yet," she said yesterday afternoon.
The
Met Office is predicting further heavy rainfalls in South-west
England in the first half of Monday, and in southern areas of England
and Wales on Tuesday.
Yet
the wettest week since December has failed to bring an end to drought
conditions.
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