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Severe snow warning as temperatures hit -10C with floods ‘around the corner’

A police car drives through heavy snow in Dunstable, Bedfordshire. Picture date: Sunday January 24, 2021. PA Photo. Conditions are set to become more hazardous going into the final week of January as the Met Office gets ready to put in place five new weather warnings for snow and ice. Photo credit should read: Joe Giddens/PA Wire
A police car drives through heavy snow in Dunstable, Bedfordshire (Picture: PA)

Britain is braced for more flooding as temperatures fall well below freezing after widespread snowfall.

Monday is set to start cold and bright across most of the country, but the mercury was expected to drop as low as -12C in parts of the Midlands and Wales.

Two yellow weather warnings across eastern Scotland and the island of Ireland for snow and ice will remain in force until 11am.

It means icy patches on untreated roads and pavements are expected, with journeys by road and rail likely to be affected.

Snow covered houses in Bracknell, Berkshire. Picture date: Sunday January 24, 2021. PA Photo. Conditions are set to become more hazardous going into the final week of January as the Met Office gets ready to put in place five new weather warnings for snow and ice. Photo credit should read: Steve Parsons/PA Wire
Houses are covered in snow in Bracknell, Berkshire (Picture: PA)

Similar warnings for ice cover the south, Midlands, Wales and the North West until 11am.

The Met Office said the weekend’s snowfall should remain on the ground through Monday, but by Wednesday temperatures across the south could have jumped back up to 10C or 12C.

With the milder weather comes a greater risk of flooding, with further problems possible in southern parts by the end of the week.

Met Office meteorologist Simon Partridge said: ‘It’s a bit of a rollercoaster from cold and wintry conditions to wet and windy ones.

Handout photo dated 22/01/21 issued by Knutsford Fire Station on Twitter showing Knutsford firefighters assisting with evacuation efforts in and around Cheshire, after Storm Christoph caused widespread flooding across the UK. Issue date: Friday January 22, 2021. PA Photo. Temperatures could drop as low as minus 10C in the coming days, as Storm Christoph gives way to colder winter weather this weekend. See PA story WEATHER Winter. Photo credit should read: Knutsford Fire Station/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Milder weather this week brings a risk of flooding (Picture: PA)

‘We are keeping an eye on rainfall totals because there are some areas that are very sensitive to rainfall and there is further possible flooding as we go through the second half of the week.’

The return of a warmer weather front will bring more anxiety to communities hit hard by Storm Christoph last week.

A recent investigation by Greenpeace’s investigative arm Unearthed and the Guardian found many of flood defences across England could be in a state of disrepair following years of high rainfall.

Freedom of Information requests found 3,400 flood defence assets were deemed to be in a poor condition last year – 6% of all structures in England – by Environment Agency inspectors.

Many areas in northern, central England and Wales, particularly towns and villages along the River Severn, endured flooding last week.

According to the investigation, as many as one in 10 flood defences in these regions were in disrepair in 2019-20.

Residents of Bewdley in Worcestershire were hit by flooding for the third year in a row last week and residents have appealed directly to the Government for their defences to be upgraded.

The Environment Agency said, over the last year, repairs had been prioritised in areas at greatest risk.

A spokesman said: ‘We maintain approximately 78,000 flood assets across England, 95% of which are in good condition and repairs prioritised where there is significant threat to lives and livelihoods.

‘Our 2020 recovery programme inspected over 20,000 assets and, supported by a £120 million government investment, all of our assets are winter ready either through repairs or, where these have not been completed, robust contingency plans are in place.’

It said in areas where repairs were unfinished, it had deployed temporary barriers, and also had 250 high volume pumps available, 6,500 trained staff and a network of trained contractors.

A spokesperson for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said: ‘We know how flooding can devastate communities, which is why since 2015 a record figure of £2.6 billion has been invested in flood schemes, better protecting 300,000 homes, and over the next six years we are doubling that investment – £5.2 billion for 2,000 new defences to better protect a further 336,000 properties.’

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source https://metro.co.uk/2021/01/25/uk-weather-severe-snow-warning-as-temperatures-hit-10c-with-floods-around-the-corner-13959361/

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