The
current climate of United Kingdom is classified as temperate,
with warm summers, cool winters and plentiful precipitation
throughout the year. The principle factors of influence
on the climate include the UK's northerly latitude (which
ranges from 50° to 60° N), its close proximity
to the Atlantic Ocean and, especially, the warming of the
waters around the British Isles by the Gulf Stream. The
weather can be notoriously changeable from one day to the
next but temperature variations throughout the year are
small.
The climate of the United Kingdom is significantly influenced
by the maritime tropical, maritime polar, continental polar
and continental tropical air masses.
A deep depression near Iceland on
27 October 2000The UK is at the boundary of convergence
between the warm tropical
air to the South and the cold polar air to the north.
In this area, the large temperature variation creates
instability and this a major factor that influences the
notoriously changeable and often unsettled weather the
UK experiences, where many or all types of weather can
be experienced in a single day.
Seasons Winter in the UK is generally a cool, wet and windy
season. Temperatures at night rarely drop below -10°C
and in the day rarely rise above 15°C. Precipitation
is plentiful throughout the season with occasional snow.
Towards the later part of the season the weather usually
stabilises with less wind, precipitation and lower temperatures.
This change is particularly pronounced near the coasts
mainly due to the fact that the Atlantic is often at
its coldest during this time after being cooled throughout
the autumn and the winter. The early part of winter however
is often unsettled and stormy; often the wettest and
windiest time of the year.
Snow can fall occasionally and mainly affects northern
and easterly areas and chiefly higher ground, especially
the mountains of Scotland where the amount of lying snow
may be significant enough on occasions to permit skiing.
Snow however rarely lasts more than a week in most areas
as the cold air brought by northerly or easterly winds,
or sustained under high pressure system, gives way to
mild southerly or westerly winds (normally introduced
by North Atlantic depressions). Low pressure systems
move in from the Atlantic ocean frequently throughout
the season, often bringing strong winds and heavy rain
along with mild temperatures. However, on rare occasions
some potent depressions may move in from the north in
the form of 'Polar Lows', introducing heavy snow and
often blizzard-like conditions to parts of the UK, particularly
Scotland.
During periods of light winds and high pressure frost
and fog can become a problem and can pose a major hazard
for drivers on the roads.
Spring is generally a rather calm, cold and dry season,
principally since the Atlantic has lost much of its heat
throughout the autumn and winter. However, as the sun
rises higher in the sky and the days get longer, temperatures
can rise relatively high and thunderstorms / heavy showers
can develop.
There is a fair chance of snow earlier in the season
when it is cooler.
Summer climatic differences are more influenced by latitude
and temperatures are highest in southern and central
areas and lowest in the north. Generally, however, summer
temperatures rarely go much above 30°C, although
temperatures have soared as high as 38°C.
The north west and north east has cool summers, the
south west has rather warmer summers (average 17°C)
and the south and south east have the warmest summers.
Summer is a rather dry season on average but rainfall
totals can have a wide local variation due to localised
thunderstorms. These thunderstorms mainly occur in southern,
eastern and central areas and are less frequent and severe
in the north and west.
North Atlantic depressions are not as frequent or severe
in summer but increase both in severity and frequency
towards the end of the season.
Autumn in the UK is notorious for being extremely unsettled.
As cool polar air moves southwards following the sun
in the sky, it meets the warm air of the tropics and
produces an area of great disturbance along which the
United Kingdom lies. This combined with the warm ocean,
which due to heating throughout the spring and summer,
produces the unsettled weather of autumn. In addition,
when the air is particularly cold it may actually be
colder than the ocean and this can result in significant
amounts of evaporation, producing clouds which eventually
condense and bring rain to the UK.
Atlantic depressions during this time can become intense
and sustained winds of hurricane force (greater than
74 MPH) have been reported. One such intense depression
was the great “hurricane” of 1987. (see below)
Western areas, being closest to the Atlantic, experience
these severe conditions to a significantly greater extent
than eastern areas.
As such, autumn, particularly the later part, is often
the stormiest time of the year.
Winds
A high temperate latitude and close proximity to a large
ocean on its westerly side means that the United Kingdom
is a windy place.
The prevailing wind in the United Kingdom is from the
south west but in such a changeable climate it may blow
from any direction for sustained periods of time. Winds
are strongest near westerly facing coasts and inland
areas where there is little topography, such as mountains,
to divert the wind.
Gales (which are defined as winds with speeds of 32
to 63 miles per hour) are strongly associated with the
passage of deep depressions across or close to the United
Kingdom, and both are most frequent in the winter. The
Hebrides experience on average 35 days of gale a year
(a day where there are gale force winds) while more inland
areas in England receive less than 5 days of gale a year.
Areas of high elevation tend to have higher wind speeds
than low elevations and Great Dun Fell in Cumbria (at
857 meters) averaged 114 days of gale a year during the
period 1963 to 1976.
Highest gust recored at a low level: 103 knots (118
MPH.) at Gwennap Head (Cornwall) on 15 December 1979.
Rainfall
Parts of the United Kingdom are surprisingly dry - London
receives less rain annually than Rome, Sydney or New
York. In England it typically rains on about 1 day in
4 and slightly more in winter. The wettest seasons are
the winter and autumn.
Rainfall amounts can vary greatly across the United
Kingdom and generally the further west and the higher
the elevation, the greater the rainfall. The Lake District
is one of the wettest places in the UK with an average
annual rainfall total that exceeds 2000mm. The mountains
of Wales, Scotland, the pennines and the moors of the
south west are also particularly wet. In contrast, the
south, south east, east and the southern midlands receive
less than 700mm of rain per year.
The county of Essex is one of the driest in the British
Isles, with an average annual rainfall of around 600mm
(24 inches), although it typically rains on around 90
days per year. In some years rainfall in Essex can be
below 450mm (18 inches) -- less than the average annual
rainfall in Jerusalem and Beirut.
The main reasons for high number of rainy days in the
UK are it's mid latitude position, its close proximity
to the Atlantic ocean and the warm waters the North Atlantic
Drift brings.
Most rainfall in the UK comes from North Atlantic depressions
which roll into the UK throughout the year and are particularly
frequent and intense in the autumn and winter. They can
on occasions bring prolonged periods of heavy rain in
the north and flooding is not rare.
Precipitation over the mountains of the north is especially
high and are some of the wettest places in Europe with
an average annual rainfall exceeding 60 inches.
Eastern and southern areas, away from the ocean, are
considerably drier than western and northern areas.
Temperature
Generally the UK has mild to cool winters and warm to
hot summers with little variation in temperature throughout
the year. In England the average annual temperature varies
from 8.5°C in the north to 12°C in the south,
but over the higher ground this can be several degrees
lower. This small variation in temperature is to a large
extent due to the moderating effect the Atlantic ocean
has since water has a much greater heat capacity than
air and tends to release it slowly throughout the year.
This has a warming influence on coastal areas in winter
and a cooling influence in summer.
The ocean is at its coldest in February or early March,
thus around coastal areas February is often the coldest
month, but inland there is little to choose between
February and January as the coldest.
Temperatures tend to drop lowest in late winter nights
inland, in the presence of high pressure, clear skies,
light winds and when there is snow on the ground. On
occasions, cold polar or continental air can be drawn
in over the United Kingdom to bring very cold weather.
The floors of inland valleys away from warming influence
of the sea can be particularly cold as cold air, being
denser than warm air, tends to drain into them. A temperature
of -26.1C was recorded under such conditions at Edgmond
in Shropshire on 10 January 1982, the coldest temperature
recorded in England and Wales. The following day the
coldest maximum temperature in England, at -11.3C,
was recorded at the same site.
The warmest winter temperatures tend to occur on the
lee of high ground and by the coast and are produced
when a moist south or south west wind warms up downwind
after the crossing the mountains. Temperatures in these
areas can rise as high as 18°C in winter on rare
occasions.
July tends to be the warmest month and the highest
temperatures tend to occur away from the Atlantic in
south eastern and central areas where summer temperatures
can soar as high as 34C. It soared to 38.5C in Kent
in the summer of 2003, the highest temperature ever
recored in the United Kingdom.
Climate History
The climate of the United Kingdom has not always been
the way it is today, and in some periods it was much
warmer, and in others it was much colder. One of the
greatest climatic events the UK has experienced was
the Ice Age. This was a period of extreme cold weather
that lasted for tens of thousands of years and ended
about 10,000 years ago. During this period the temperature
was so extremely low that the much of the surrounding
ocean froze and a great ice sheet extended over all
but the very southern edge of the UK.
10,000 years ago the UK began warming, resulting in
the melting of the ice sheets bringing the interglacial
period that were are in today. There have been many
glacial and interglacial periods in the geological
history of the United Kingdom.
Climate Change
Some evidence exists that suggests that the climate of
the United Kingdom is undergoing a process of warming
as a result of global climate change.
Current research has concluded that the north of the
UK is warming faster than the south and this process
is expected to continue in the future unless global emissions
of greenhouse gases, the prime culprit for global warming,
are reduced. Average annual temperatures are expected
to rise to by about 2 and 3.5°C by the 2080's and
the autumn and winter will see the greatest warming,
with summer rises of temperature in south England and
south Wales expected to be the highest.
Rises in temperature in the winter of the northwest
of Scotland are predicted to be between 1°C and 2°C.
The south east of the United Kingdom will experience
some of the most dramatic changes in temperature with
an increase of 4 or 5°C expected by the 2080's.
Precipitation is expected to increase in all areas of
the United Kingdom with increases of 15% to 35%, depending
on the area of the country. Summers will become drier
and the country as a whole may be anything from 35% to
50% drier by the 2080's with the largest changes expected
in the south east of england and the smallest in the
north west of Scotland.
Snow will become up to 60% more rare in parts of Scotland
and up to 90% more rare in the rest of the UK.
It is expected that due to this warming severe weather
events in the UK will become more frequent and severe
and rising sea levels from melting ice caps could flood
parts of low lying areas of the UK such as London.
The summer of 2003 was the hottest on record, with a
temperature of 38.5C being recorded in Faversham, Kent
- the highest ever measured in the UK. Some point to
this as evidence of global warming.
Some believe there is a small possibility that the UK
will be plunged into a new ice age in the near future
due to a decrease in salinity in the North Atlantic ocean
caused by the melting ice caps of Greenland. This diluting
of the salt water could mean that North Atlantic Drift
will no longer be able to sink to complete the cycle
of the global conveyor, thus shutting off the warm water
supply of the North Atlantic Drift to the UK which would
result in much colder conditions. |