Summer 2025 will ‘almost certainly’ be UK’s warmest on record, Met Office says | UK weather

This summer, after the country has four heat waves, it will be the hottest record for England.
The average temperature for the summer is followed by 16.13C (61.03f), which is significantly above the current registration of 15.76C determined in 2018.
Many of them remember 1976 as a scorching summer with a record wave of heat, but these data will fall from five hottest summers since the records began in 1884.
Met Office Scientist Emily Carlisle said: “Temporary Met Office statistics show that 2025 will be almost the hottest summer in the record… As long as the estimation does not recommend, temperatures are about four degrees below the average for the rest of August, as the existing records will be overcome.
“Of course, meteorological literature is still a few days left, but it is not possible that the 2025 writing will prevent the record from the hottest.”
Met Office will officially announce whether the meteorological season, which started on June 1, ends on Monday, September 1, the hottest summer.
June and July, including the last days of the last days of heat waves, including hot air. In most of the country, it rained very little, and the British is experiencing what the government calls “national important” water deficiencies. While the reservoirs, rivers and groundwater work dry, most of the UK is under a prohibition of a Hosepipe.
Although the summer was constantly hot, there was no excessive heat. The highest temperature recorded for 2025 was Faversham on July 1, 35.8c in the Kent and the highest level of all time set in the UK’s July 2022 is very short.
Meteorologists said that this year’s consistent temperature was directed with dry ground, high -pressure systems and unusual hot seas around the UK, and the minimum temperatures were above the extraordinary average.
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Met Office, climate breakdown will be accused, he said. UK heating is approximately 0.25 ° C every decade.
This summer, the sea heat wave was also fed by climate deterioration, Met Office said.