Heat health alert for parts of UK as country braces for fresh heatwave

While the country was bracket for a new heat wave this week, new heat health warnings were given to the major parts of the UK.
A yellow heat health warning was given by London, South East, South West, East Midlands, West Midlands and England Health Safety Agency (UKHSA) in the east of England.
A few more cool days later, temperatures will rise to 30C in the UK this week. The hot weather is foreseen on Thursday and will continue at the weekend.
The Met Office estimated that he would reach 30C at London, Manchester, York, Birmingham and Cardiff on Saturday.
Ukhsa said that a heat warning was set between 10:00 and 15 July 2025 between 10:00 – July 15, 2025.


Warnings provide an early warning system to the authorities and the public to show when temperatures can reach dangerous levels. Green (no warning), yellow, amber, red (emergency response) are coded colors.
A yellow warning shows that weather conditions may affect vulnerable people, while amber warning conditions warn that conditions may affect the wider population and pressure on health services.
A red warning means an important risk for life for the whole population.
Yellow warning, in the late June in the South East in the Southern East 34C, which sees that the amber heat health warnings follows.
The Met Office was recorded by the Met Office in the St James’s Park in the center of London on July 1, 34.7 ° C and defeated the hottest day of the year on June 21, Surrey, Charlwood 33.2c was recorded.

A study by Met Office scientists revealed that Britain’s chance of exceeding 40C was 20 times higher than the 1960s.
Coningsby in Lincolnshire, Continental Europe’s warmer in the hottest summer 40.3C, the UK first recorded temperatures of more than 40C in July 2022.
Met Office, increasing excessive air patterns already caused forest fires, power and transport and increased mortality, he said.
“Since our climate continues to warm up, we can expect the chance to continue to rise. We estimate the chance to see 40c days again in the next 12 years,” he said.
“We also found that temperatures a few degrees higher than we saw in July 2022 are possible in today’s climate.”