World News Intel

Warm or hot weather was persistent in the UK throughout most of June 2023, with temperatures peaking at 32°C in parts of south-east England. Although well short of last July’s record 40°C, for large parts of England the last time June was this hot was in 1846 – almost 180 years ago.

The Met Office keeps a detailed national and regional temperature database extending back to 1884, and 2023 now appears certain to claim the title for the hottest June during that period for the whole of the UK.

There are too few reliable long-term temperature records to extend the series to the whole of the UK prior to 1884, and before that scientists rely on a composite regional database known as the Central England Temperature series, or CET. The CET series draws on records from a roughly triangular area bounded by Lancashire, London and Bristol.

This temperature series starts in 1659 and was originally compiled by Cambridge climatologist Gordon Manley in 1953. It is the longest instrumental temperature record in the world, and is updated monthly by the Met Office Hadley Centre in Exeter. June’s provisional mean CET looks to be around 17.2°C or 17.3°C, which is about 2.5°C hotter than the norm over the most recent 30-year period.

There are two main reasons why June 2023 was so warm in the UK. First, sea surface temperatures in the north Atlantic and around the British Isles have been at record or near-record highs in recent weeks. Winds blowing from almost any direction passed over warmer-than-normal seas and so were likely to arrive warmer than normal too.



An ‘extreme’ heatwave has hit the seas around the UK and Ireland – here’s what’s going on


Second, June was dominated by slow-moving (or “blocked”) high-pressure systems sitting over or a little to the east of Britain and Ireland. This led to long spells of settled, dry weather. And with the sun at its highest elevation in the year, plentiful sunshine meant temperatures rose quickly.

Persistent high pressure over the North Sea has meant warm and settled weather for the UK. Mean sea level pressure for June 2023, in millibars.
NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory, Author provided

Hot Junes were rare during the last 150 years

It may be a surprise to discover in this era of increasing temperatures as a result of fossil-fuel driven climate change that there have been even hotter Junes than 2023 – quite a bit hotter too. For some reason, very warm or hot Junes have been almost absent within the last 150 years, although they were much more common up to the middle of the 19th century.

June 1846 still tops the CET table with a mean temperature of 18.2°C. You have to go back another 170 years to find one as hot, June 1676, when temperatures averaged 18.0°C. Seventeenth-century temperature records are fewer and subject to greater uncertainty than later periods, so this might be a few tenths of a degree out in either direction.

After 1846 and 1676 comes June 1826 with a mean temperature of 17.3°C, and then June 1822 (17.1°C). June 2023 looks to be in the same territory. The next three hottest Junes tie with a mean CET of 16.9°C: 1762, 1798 and 1976.

Warm Junes have been a relative rarity since about 1850. The green line shows the long period average for June is 14.3°C.
Dr Stephen Burt/University of Reading, Author provided

That last entry was the most recent in the top ten of all-time hottest Junes until this year. It was the start of the outstandingly hot and dry summer of 1976. June temperatures that year were actually fairly close to average until an exceptional hot spell set in during the closing week. Hot, dry and sunny weather then persisted with little interruption until the end of August.

In contrast, although no new records for extreme temperatures were set, temperatures in June 2023 surpassed 30°C fairly widely mid-month, even as far north as Cumbria. The last time such high temperatures were reached before mid-June was back in 1996.

June 2023 was also sunny in most places, although less so on east and north-east coasts where sea fogs were persistent. Up to June 29, Bournemouth Airport on the south coast of England had recorded 292 hours of sunshine, an average of over ten hours per day, with one still to count. The long-term June average there is 230 hours (seven-and-a-half hours per day).

The month was also dry or very dry in most places. In parts of East Anglia, June rainfall has been less than a third of normal. These conditions led to some hosepipe bans in south-east England. Without substantial rainfall, further water restrictions seem likely in other areas before too long.

Will temperatures remain high in July?

And what of the rest of summer – is a pleasant June all we can expect? What clues can we glean from previous hot Junes?

Of the months with the highest June mean temperature (1676, 1762, 1798, 1822, 1826, 1846 and 1976), only the summers of 1826 and 1976 remained hot. July 1762 was hotter than June, but August was cool, while summers in the other years were mostly a little warmer than normal, but not as warm as June.

So, if the historical record is anything to go by, we may have already seen the hottest weeks of summer 2023. Of course, the rest is up to Mother Nature.


Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like?

Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 20,000+ readers who’ve subscribed so far.


Source link

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version

Subscribe For Latest Updates

Sign up to best of business news, informed analysis and opinions on what matters to you.
Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Thanks for subscribing!