UK
suffers wettest winter on record
Met
Office announces rainfall of 486.8mm from 1 December to 19 February –
the wettest winter in records dating to 1910
20
February, 2014
The
UK has suffered its wettest winter in records dating back more than a
century, the Met Office has announced.
Figures
for 1 December to 19 February show that the UK has had 486.8mm (19.2
in) of rain, making it the wettest winter in records dating back to
1910, beating the previous record set in 1995 of 485.1mm (19.1 in).
Wales,
east Scotland, and south-west, south-east and central-southern
England have all seen record amounts of rainfall, and all areas of
the UK are on target for a warmer-than-average winter.
Two
severe flood warnings remain in place for the Somerset Levels, which
has been one of the worst-hit areas this winter, suffering prolonged
flooding in the face of repeated storms and heavy rain.
Across
the rest of southern and central England, the risk of flooding is
receding as river levels fall, including along the Thames and Severn,
the Environment Agency said.
But
properties in areas including Windsor and Maidenhead, Surrey,
Buckinghamshire, Wokingham and West Berkshire could remain flooded
for some time.
And
with more unsettled weather on the way, the risk of flooding will be
slow to disappear, the Environment Agency warned.
There
are 75 flood warnings and 121 less serious flood alerts currently in
place across England and Wales. Groundwater is continuing to rise,
with ongoing flooding in parts of Greater London, Kent, Hampshire,
Wiltshire and Dorset.
Met
Office spokeswoman Laura Young said showers and some heavier rain are
expected along with sunny spells over the next few days, and a band
of rain will move across the UK on Sunday, mainly focusing on the
west.
The
Environment Agency has announced that dredging on the Somerset Levels
is to start next month as soon as it is safe and practical to do so.
Five
miles of river channel where the Tone and Parrett rivers meet at
Burrowbridge – an area identified by local people for dredging and
where significant amounts of silt have built up – will be dredged,
the agency said.
The
announcement comes in the wake of a row over the prolonged flooding
of the Somerset Levels, in which local people and MPs accused the
government and Environment Agency of ignoring repeated calls for
dredging to reduce flood risk.
Work
will be ready to start by the end of March provided water levels in
the area drop and the banks and adjacent land are dry enough for
excavators to work safely, according to the Environment Agency.
Paul
Leinster, chief executive of the Environment Agency, said: "We
plan to start dredging by the end of March, as long as the
contractors deem it is safe to do so.
"We
are committed to dredging as part of a broader package of work to
protect people, property and land in Somerset."
Officials
and ministers have faced criticism that two decades of
under-investment in flood defence work had turned the Somerset Levels
into a disaster area, and that repeated calls to dredge before the
floods went unheeded.
It's
not over yet
Here
we go again of Ireland and the UK.
Swell
size forecast for tomorrow, 9h UTC for the British Isles, Iceland and
the west coast of Europe. Ireland may expect waves up to 10 m high as
winds from the combined double low reach storm strength west of
Ireland.
Source:
Magicseaweed.com
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