Summary

  1. Forecast: What will the rest of the week look like?published at 22:27 BST

    As we're nearing the end of the hottest June day on record in the UK, here's a look at what is in store for the rest of the heatwave, which continues into the end of the week.

    We're leaving our news coverage here for today - you can head to our news story for the latest updates.

    Media caption,

    What's next for the heatwave and when will it end?

  2. Hottest June day on record as UK heatwave set to continuepublished at 22:23 BST

    Tara Mewawalla
    Live reporter

    A woman uses a fan to cool down in London during June heatwaveImage source, EPA

    Today was the hottest June day on record, with temperatures provisionally hitting 36.1C in Gosport in Hampshire. It surpasses the previous record set 50 years ago.

    With it came travel disruption across England and Wales, and a spate of emergency incidents. This heatwave might feel particularly punishing, BBC Weather explains, because of the humidity.

    Professor Stephen Belcher, the Met Office's chief scientist, says human-induced climate change has made events like this "more likely and more intense".

    However, it wasn't as warm for Northern Ireland and Scotland, who failed to beat yesterday's temperatures. Here's a list of the top temperatures in each UK nation on Wednesday.

    Other countries are also feeling the effects of the "heat dome" sitting over western Europe. It continues to cause deaths and disruption, particularly in France, Spain and Italy.

    And there is little respite - tomorrow will be sunny and hot again for many in the UK.

    In England and Wales, amber and red alerts for extreme heat remain in place until 23:59 BST on Thursday. A yellow alert for thunderstorms has also been issued for the south-west of England.

    Want to stay cool? Read through our top tips.

    We're are about to bring our live coverage to a close, but before we do, we will bring you a quick look at the temperatures forecast across the UK tomorrow, and when the heatwave may end.

  3. Major heat-related emergencies in parts of southern Englandpublished at 22:05 BST

    Emergency services have been called out across England today in response to heat-related incidents. Here is a reminder:

    Hampshire: A major rescue operation was launched after a 15-year-old boy went missing after swimming at Testwood Lakes nature reserve.

    Hampshire Police said it deployed marine units to aid in the search and the police air service, ambulance service and fire services were also sent to the scene.

    Surrey: The ambulance service said more than 10 people were taken to hospital, primarily for minor heat-related illnesses, after being stuck on the M25 motorway in Surrey after it closed due to a crash.

    Drivers were stranded in lanes of traffic for several hours. Earlier in the day, a driver was airlifted to hospital after a van and lorry were involved in a serious crash.

    Portsmouth: A critical incident was declared at Queen Alexandra Hospitalafter a cooling system supporting "critical infrastructure" failed partly due to the pressures of the heatwave.

    Systems impacted included digital systems, critical clinical services and diagnostic scanning facilities.

  4. More than 10 hospitalised after being trapped in hot weather on M25 for hourspublished at 21:58 BST

    We can bring you more now on the accident on the M25 that has left drivers stranded in the heat for hours.

    The South East Coast Ambulance Service says more than 10 people have been hospitalised, "primarily with minor and heat-related" conditions after being stuck in traffic.

    Crews have now left the scene after assessing and treating a number of patients, the ambulance service adds.

  5. Umbrella, fans and trees - Europe seeks cool during heatwavepublished at 21:40 BST

    It's not just the UK that is suffering from a heatwave - many other parts of Europe are also sweltering.

    The temperatures continue to cause deaths and disruption, particularly in France, Spain and Italy.

    Tourists holding an orange umbrella, wearing sunglasses and having handheld fans. There are orange gates around the square and large buildings in the background.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Tourists with umbrellas and fans in Venice, with a red heat alert in place in the city

    A child, wearing white, reaches for the water coming out of a silver water fountain, with puddles of water around the fountain.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    In Paris, a child reaches for cold water to cool down in temperatures which were over 39C

    People sitting on a bench under a tree with green leaves, seeking shade.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    People in Barcelona seek shade under the trees to cool off during an intense heatwave

  6. UK sees temperatures hotter than The Bahamaspublished at 21:31 BST

    People sat on a beach, shading from the sun with umbrellas and sat on towels. The sea and some large buildings are in the background.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    In Barcelona, beachgoers make the most of the sun - but temperatures are lower today than in parts of the UK

    The UK has seen its hottest June day on record, with 36.1C recorded in Gosport in Hampshire.

    The place may be a far cry from the sandy shores of The Bahamas, but its highs make it hotter than the Caribbean country of The Bahamas, which reached 31C on Wednesday.

    Here's where else the Hampshire town - known for its shingle and pebble beaches - is hotter than:

    • New York - 29C
    • Barbados - 30C
    • Madagascar - 30C
    • Barcelona - 30C
    • Costa Rica - 31C
    • Jamaica - 33C

    Temperature in other parts of Europe, however, are sweltering as a heatwave grips the continent. In Bordeaux, France, and Bilbao in Spain, temperatures hit 42C.

  7. Passengers evacuated from hovercraft after engines seen smokingpublished at 21:24 BST

    Galya Dimitrova
    BBC South of England

    Two fire engines waiting outside a ticket station in SouthseaImage source, Submitted

    Thirty-one passengers have been evacuated from a hovercraft in the south of England after its engines were seen smoking.

    Hovertravel's Island Flyer was preparing to depart from Southsea, Portsmouth to Ryde on the Isle of Wight when a fire warning was activated, the company says.

    Fire crews attended the scene and the pilot used the onboard fire extinguisher.

    The company says its services are currently cancelled and will next give an update at 06:00 on Thursday.

  8. How to sleep better in hot weatherpublished at 21:15 BST

    In warm weather, it can be harder to sleep as bedrooms become stuffy and hot.

    As bedtime approaches, here are some tips and tricks to help you have a peaceful rest:

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  9. 'This is an emergency' - MP urges police to aid drivers stuck on M25published at 21:04 BST

    An MP has taken to social media to ask emergency services to help drivers that have been stuck on the M25 for hours.

    Folkestone and Hythe MP Tony Vaughan addressed National Highways and Surrey Police in a post on X, writing: "Please sort this out urgently.

    "People need water and some may need evacuation. You have protocols for this situation - please implement them - this is an emergency!"

    He says one constituent had been stuck on the motorway near Oxted with her children for eight hours and that her car was 40C.

    "She is running out of water. The person from the car in front has been airlifted to hospital with dehydration. Police seem to be saying it's not their job to give out water," Vaughan adds.

    Earlier, we reported that the ambulance service is trying to reach people stuck on the M25 after a crash led to road closures.

  10. Driver 'very wobbly' after being stuck on M25 in sweltering heatpublished at 20:44 BST

    Emergency services and motorists on motorway. There is a yellow helicopter nearby and two fire brigade vehicles.Image source, luke_8m
    Image caption,

    Surrey Police say two vehicles were involved in a crash on the M25 earlier on Wednesday

    The ambulance service is trying to reach people stuck in traffic for hours on the M25 after a crash led to lane closures in the soaring heat.

    Driver Kerry Matthews says she was stuck for five hours and had to turn her air-conditioning off to save petrol - she was left feeling "very wobbly" by the time she made it to the petrol station, BBC South East reports.

    In a Facebook post, another woman says her parents have been stuck "for over 4.5 hours" without information or supplies.

    She says there are "elderly people, babies, animals, [and] people with health conditions" stuck on the tarmac on "the hottest June day for 50 years".

    She adds: "Can the police not co-ordinate some water and assistance? The exits are taking hours".

    Another posted that her parents in their 70s had seen ambulances trying to get through and people "lying on the ground unwell".

  11. Critical incident declared at Portsmouth hospital over cooling system failurepublished at 20:25 BST

    A view of the Queen Alexandra Hospital, with an ambulance transport with yellow and green square patterns, and three flags at the top, including the union jack.Image source, Getty Images

    Queen Alexandra Hospital in Portsmouth has declared a critical incident after a cooling system supporting "critical infrastructure" failed during the heatwave.

    Mark Orchard, deputy chief executive and chief financial officer of Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust, says: “The unprecedented pressures created by the current heatwave, combined with the failure of a number of our chiller units, have led to significant disruption across several of our services."

    He says services impacted include "digital systems and critical clinical services, including theatres, cardiac catheter laboratories, and diagnostic scanning facilities".

    Some planned procedures and appointments have been "stood down", a statement from the hospital says - those impacted have been contacted already.

    Patients are warned the hospital is "very hot" so to limit the number of people accompanying them to appointments.

  12. Another month, another record temperaturepublished at 20:11 BST

    Today's temperature has surpassed the previous June record set in 1976 of 35.6C.

    It comes weeks after May saw its hottest day on record, when temperatures reached 35.1C.

    BBC Weather presenter Simon King explains why this is significant and warns it will likely get hotter in the coming days.

    Media caption,

    UK hits hottest June day on record

  13. Not much demand for coffee in London's cafespublished at 19:54 BST

    Lola Schroer
    BBC News, reporting from Richmond

    A man wearing a white top, smiling, while standing on a river boat by the river.
    Image caption,

    James O'Mara-Roberts says customers have been broadly polite in sweltering conditions

    James O'Mara-Roberts, who works at the boat cafe Peggy Jean in Richmond, London, says today has been long one.

    "It's the hottest day I've ever worked," he tells us.

    Customers "are a bit more stressed" than usual but have generally remained patient, though their choice of drinks have changed.

    He adds: “Customers have been wanting cold drinks, a few spritzes and a lot of cocktails. Coffees have been scarce."

  14. BBC Verify

    Forecasters not exaggerating heat in 'dark red’ mapspublished at 19:46 BST

    By Marco Silva

    Social media posts claiming weather maps are making UK heat look worse than it is are misleading.

    Deep red colours are commonly used by weather forecasters to show high temperatures, but some posts previously seen by BBC Verify have wrongly suggested they are meant to exaggerate weather and scare people.

    Forecasters say the colours simply reflect how hot it actually is, including both the Met Office and BBC Weather who have updated their graphics in recent years.

    Temperature maps use a standard colour scale: cooler conditions appear in blues, while higher temperatures are shown in progressively darker reds.

    These changes were made to ensure consistency and improve accessibility - for example, by making it easier for people who have trouble distinguishing colours to read a weather map.

    The Met Office says the UK’s June temperature record, 35.6C, set in Southampton in 1976 and Camden Square in 1957, is likely to be broken this week.

    When maps appear more intense it is because the temperatures themselves are unusually high. The colours used are not exaggerating the heat, they are accurately representing it.

    Media caption,

    No, weather maps did not change to 'scare' people

  15. Weather warnings in place into the weekendpublished at 19:45 BST

    A Met Office graphic showing the amber and red alerts in effect for extreme heat. It covers much of the south east, south west, east midlands, north wales, and most of the north of England.Image source, Met Office
    Image caption,

    Met Office alerts for extreme heat are in effect from now until 23:59 on Thursday

    Wednesday

    Amber and red alerts for extreme heat came into effect at 09:00 this morning, covering much of England and Wales.

    Thursday

    The same alerts will come to an end at 23:59 BST. A yellow alert for thunderstorms has also been issued for the south-west of England, lasting from 18:00 to 23:59.

    Friday

    A separate amber alert for extreme heat, lasting from midnight on Friday until 23:59 covers south-east England, eastern England and parts of the Midlands.

    Saturday

    An amber alert for extreme heat will be in place from midnight on Saturday until 21:00. It covers a smaller part of England, including London, the south-east, and east of England.

    A Met Office graphic showing the amber alert for extreme heat, covering London, the south east, and east of England.Image source, Met Office
    Image caption,

    Saturday's amber alert for extreme heat is in effect until 21:00

  16. 'We're not winning' the climate battle, John Kerry tells BBCpublished at 19:37 BST

    John Kerry in a suit and tie, speaking on the BBC.

    Is the world losing the climate battle?

    Former US Secretary of State and US Climate Envoy John Kerry says "no" - but tells BBC News: "But we're not yet winning."

    The former presidential candidate says the world is experiencing incredible heatwaves and droughts around the world, and that every decade for the last four has been hotter than the last.

    Speaking in the BBC's London's newsroom, he says: "You would think at some point people who are supposed to be reasonable, and leaders, would stop and say 'OK, enough, we've got to respond to this'."

    On the US specifically, Kerry, a Democrat, criticises Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and President Donald Trump, who he calls "dangerous and reckless" on their approach to the climate.

    Other countries are turning to new technologies to slow down climate change, in areas like fuel and electric vehicles.

    "Really amazing things are happening," Kerry adds.

  17. A royally hot daypublished at 19:27 BST

    Even King Charles III was feeling the heat today as he attended a London Climate Week reception at St James's Palace.

    Master of the Household to the Sovereign, Vice Admiral Sir Tony Johnstone-Burt, was close by and armed with a battery-powered fan to assist.

    King Charles III rolling his eyes in a room crowded with people as a man stands behind him holding a small fan close to his faceImage source, PA Media
  18. Paris burns as temperatures in French capital top 40Cpublished at 19:17 BST

    Hugh Schofield
    Paris correspondent

    For the second day in a row France has recorded its hottest day since measurements began after World War Two.

    The average temperature over Wednesday based on readings at 30 weather stations around the country was 30C. Tuesday had already set a record with 29.9 degrees.

    The temperature in Paris and many other areas broke 40C on Wednesday.

    On Thursday, 72 departments or counties will be in the maximum red alert zone. This is the largest area to be in the red zone since the system was developed. Only the southeast of the country is relatively spared.

    Two departments – Haute-Garonne in the south and Deux-Sèvres in the west – are also on maximum alert for forest fires.

    The heatwave is slowly shifting to the east but no immediate relief is expected, with temperatures above 40 forecast for the weekend.

  19. Ambulances trying to reach people stuck in traffic for hours on M25published at 19:13 BST

    An aerial shot of queuing on the M25Image source, Reuben Brown

    Several people stranded in traffic on the M25 after a crash earlier are being treated for heat-related illnesses, South East Coast Ambulance Service says.

    Lanes were closed on a stretch of the motorway in Surrey, with drivers stuck on the road for "several hours" as temperatures soared.

    The ambulance service says coach passengers are among those being treated, without specifying how many people are unwell.

    Heavy traffic means ambulances are still trying to reach people on the road near Godstone.

    A driver was airlifted to hospital earlier today after a van and lorry were involved in a serious crash.

    A "significant oil spillage" damaged the road, police said earlier.

  20. A sweaty evening commute under way across the capitalpublished at 18:51 BST

    A woman wearing a white sleeveless top and black dress blow a portable fan in her faces while walking along a tube platform. A Tube train full of commuters is stationary on the platform next to herImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Millions are braving a very stuffy trip home from work on the London Underground

    Lots of commuters packed into a tube carriage, with red doors open and people holding onto the yellow bars.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Although many may have opted to work from home due to the heat alert, it's still standing room only on trains