Flooding
risk remains as
The warnings were for Preston beach, Lower Stour and Chiswell, where the Environment Agency sounded its flood siren warning of extreme danger to people and property on Monday night after the sea breached Chesil beach and spray crashed over flood defences.
more heavy rain is forecast
for UK
Dorset
residents on alert as strong winds, high waves and heavy rain
continue to threaten saturated areas of England and Wales
7
January, 2014
The
Met Office has extended its severe weather alert
until Thursday morning, warning that the already saturated ground and
swollen rivers in the south of England and Wales might
not cope with more rain.
The
yellow warning – the lowest of the Met Office's three levels –
forecasts "periods of heavy rain" in the south-west of
England and Wales for Wednesday and into Thursday with 30mm to 40mm
falling in the wettest spots.
Flooding
near Christchurch in Dorset. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA
Three
severe weather warnings, signalling danger to life, remain in place
in Dorset as waves and strong winds continue to batter coastal
regions of the UK.
The warnings were for Preston beach, Lower Stour and Chiswell, where the Environment Agency sounded its flood siren warning of extreme danger to people and property on Monday night after the sea breached Chesil beach and spray crashed over flood defences.
Dorset
police warned residents to
move to an upstairs room facing away from the sea and told those who
had been evacuated not to return to their homes.
More
than 100 flood warnings, signalling immediate action required, are in
place,
including in Dorset, Oxfordshire, south Wiltshire, Hampshire and
along the river Thames, while more than 195 low-level alerts have
been issued.
Waves crash on to the promenade between Fleetwood and Blackpool.
Photograph: John Giles/PA
The
Met Office said heavy showers, some of them combined with hail and
thunder, would continue
to affect parts of southern England at
times throughout Tuesday and early on Wednesday.
A
spokesman said: "Further bands of showers running into southern
counties have the potential to produce intense bursts of rain, these
quickly leading to localised impacts given the very saturated ground.
Hail will be an additional hazard associated with some of the
heaviest showers."
On
Monday, Labour
accused the environment secretary, Owen Paterson, of buck
passing after
he said the government was working closely with local councils, the
insurance industry and others, to ensure that people affected by
flooding could quickly get the help they needed.
Friends
of the Earth have challenged the government's claim that it has
presided over an increase in spending on flood defences, claiming
that analysis of figures from the Department for Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs showed a drop
.
The Thames barrier is to close again to prevent flooding. Photograph: Al
Khan/Demotix/Corbis
Coastlines
in southern England and Wales were particularly badly affected by the
latest band of storms. Flooding in the Somerset Levels had left
villages cut off, damaged roads and buildings, and waves of up to
27ft were recorded at Land's End, the most westerly point of England.
In Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, residents of seafront properties along
the promenade were again evacuated to a rest centre at a local
school.
The
Thames barrier was closed on Tuesday for the 11th consecutive day,
approaching the record number of consecutive closures, which was 14
in January 2003.
Searches
involving more than 100 volunteers are continuing in south Devon for
missing university student Harry Martin, who was last seen leaving
his home to take photographs of the weather. Devon and Cornwall
police said a 20-mile stretch of coastline, 10 miles either side of
the 18-year-old's home at Newton Ferrers, had been extensively
searched as well as inland areas.
Seven
people have died and more than 1,700 homes and businesses have been
flooded in England since the beginning of the Christmas period, with
300 properties flooded since the new year. Some 140 properties have
been flooded in Wales.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.