Britain Set for Wettest Summer on Record
UK: September 3, 2007
LONDON - This summer looks set to have been the wettest in Britain since
records began as the Jet Stream sucked in successive depressions, the Met
Office said.
Provisional data up to Aug. 28 showed that Britain as a whole had 358.5
millimetres of rain, just beating the previous record of 358.4 mm set in
1956. Records began in 1914.
"These figures confirm what most people have already been thinking -- this
summer has been very wet and very disappointing for most," said Keith
Groves, Head of Forecasting at the Met Office.
He said the reason was that the Jet Stream -- a set of very strong winds at
high altitude -- had been further south than in a normal summer.
However, while the weather may have been the soggiest on record with major
flooding in many parts of the country, it was also relatively warm,
averaging 14.1 degrees Celsius (57.38F).
And while England far exceeded the previous record rainfall at 324.2 mm
against 308.2 mm in 1956, in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland the
rainfall fell short of previous records.
Northern Ireland had 374.5 mm of rain against 404.0 mm in 1958, while
Scotland had 383.3 mm against 453.6 in 1985. Wales had 469.9 mm compared
with 499.5 in 1927.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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