Exact date 25c mini-heatwave will arrive in uk and potentially rise to 31c

Exact date 25c mini-heatwave will arrive in uk and potentially rise to 31c

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ADVANCED WEATHER MODELLING MAPS SHOW JUST HOW EARLY TEMPERATURES COULD START TO SURGE THIS SUMMER AHEAD OF WHAT THE MET OFFICE EXPECTS WILL BE A WARMER-THAN-USUAL SEASON. 15:22, 02 Jun 2025


UK weather maps show a 25C temperature spike after the Met Office issued a heatwave warning. Advanced weather modelling maps show just how early temperatures could start to surge this summer


ahead of what the Met Office expects will be a warmer-than-usual season. The exact date the heatwave could sizzle England is June 12. Temperatures in London and the south-east will reach


the highest, up to 25C in Essex and on the Norfolk coast. Maps and charts have turned crimson red with hopes Greater London could experience highs up to 31C, with 29C earmarked on weather


charts and maps, as mirrored by Netweather TV and Ventusky. READ MORE SMART MOTORWAYS COULD BE SCRAPPED FROM ENGLAND ENTIRELY A Met Offce outlook for late June explains: "Changeable


weather is most likely across the UK with a mixture of Atlantic weather systems moving in from the west interspersed with dry and sunny periods, perhaps with a bias towards longer dry spells


early in the period. "Temperatures are most likely to be near or slightly above normal, perhaps with some hot spells at times especially across the south." Article continues below


The UK is more likely to experience a hotter-than-normal summer with an increased chance for heatwaves, according to the Met Office. In its most recent three month outlook, it has predicted


that meteorological summer - which runs from 1 June to 31 August - is twice as likely to be hotter than normal in 2025. The prediction follows an unprecedented spring which was the


sunniest, as well as one of the driest and warmest, on record. Article continues below The UK is likely to experience a summer that is "hotter than normal", with the Met Office


saying there is more than double the normal chance of this. Forecast temperature anomalies across the world for the northern hemisphere summer shows most areas are likely to see a warmer


than normal season. The Met Office says that the warming is being largely brought about by human-induced climate change.