Summary

  1. Cancellations and delays - the scene at London Eustonpublished at 17:54 BST

    Charlotte Hadfield
    Live reporter

    A departure board at London Euston, being looked at by lots of commuters.

    This was the scene at London Euston at rush hour this evening as hundreds of people try to get home in the baking heat.

    Trains to Liverpool Lime Street, Manchester Piccadilly, Crewe, Northampton and Bletchley are among the services cancelled due to the hot weather, while others are facing long delays.

    Several platforms are closed and people are using handheld fans to try and cool down, while others are sitting on the floor clutching bottles of water.

    I’m travelling to Stockport on the delayed 14.53 Avanti West Coast train, which has just departed.

    People in front of me were running to try and get a seat on the train.

    Thankfully, I’ve found one and the air conditioning is working, but those sitting in coach D are not so lucky.

  2. Travellers facing disruptions on their evening commutepublished at 17:49 BST

    Commuters are facing widespread transport disruptions due to the hot weather. People are being advised to check their routes before travelling. Here's a list of what's affected:

    • In London, severe delays are reported on some tube lines, including: Victoria Line, Northern Line, Lioness Line and parts of the Bakerloo, Central and District Lines
    • The M25 in Kent and Surrey is closed after two vehicles were involved in a serious crash
    • Transport for Wales has cancelled services across Wales due to extreme heat and a shortage of trains. The rail operator says most routes will remain cancelled until the end of the day
    • London North Eastern Railway has told customers to not travel unless it's "absolutely necessary. Disruptions have also been reported by a number of train operators
  3. Search under way for 15-year-old missing after swimming in lakepublished at 17:33 BST

    A major rescue operation is under way after a 15-year-old boy went missing after swimming at a nature reserve.

    Emergency services have been attending the scene at Testwood Lakes, near Totton, Hampshire, after the teenager was reported missing at 13:35 BST.

    Hampshire Police says it has deployed marine units to aid in the search, with people advised to avoid the area.

    The National Police Air Service, South Central Ambulance Service, and Hampshire and Isle of Wight Fire Service have also been sent to the scene.

  4. Highest temperature recorded today now up to 36.1Cpublished at 17:09 BST
    Breaking

    The June heat record keeps getting pushed higher. The maximum recorded now is a provisional 36.1C in Gosport, Hampshire.

  5. Farmers having to adapt to a warming worldpublished at 17:04 BST

    Esme Stallard
    Senior climate and science reporter

    A woman in a blue sweatshirt and red t-shirt underneath smiles at the camera, she has short brown hair. In the background is a grass field with a black sheepImage source, Just Farms/Ceri Squire
    Image caption,

    Ceri Squire runs a farm in South Wales

    For those whose livelihoods are dependent on the weather conditions, these repeated heatwaves throw up challenges.

    Ceri Squire, a sheep and cattle farmer in Bridgend, says: "The unusual weather means that the seasons, as my in-laws used to farm by, are no longer consistent periods of months. We have to be flexible."

    She says that she is having to spray her sheep down regularly to prevent blowflies taking hold and laying eggs in the wool.

    Ceri adds: "This week we were planning to take livestock to a local livestock market, but we are legally not allowed to transport animals in temperatures over 30 degrees unless we have a temperature controlled vehicle for them."

    For many smaller family-run farms, they are too expensive to have.

    This week the National Farmers' Union urged the government to do more to tackle the "stark" impacts of climate change, saying "fields that produce wheat for the nation’s bread can be underwater one year, then parched and cracking the next".

  6. Difficult to keep children safe in the heat, says headteacherpublished at 16:53 BST

    Alex Meakin

    Headshot of McLaren stood outside in the sun looking at the camera

    The Hurst School in Berkshire is one of many across the county that have closed early today to shield pupils from the warm weather.

    A little earlier, headteacher Jayne McLaren told us: “The first most and important thing to me is always the wellbeing of my staff and students.

    "The temperatures in some of the class rooms are in the high thirties now and we haven’t got the highest temperatures yet.

    “We’ve had many trips to the medical centre. We have children that are suffering with heat exhaustion. It is difficult for us to keep them safe here.”

    She said that she hoped things are "back to normal" next week, adding: "The temperature looks like it's coming down to the early 20s which, compared to now, is tolerable."

  7. Why some women suffer more in the heat than menpublished at 16:46 BST

    Woman rubs sunscreen on friends back in the heatwaveImage source, Getty Images

    BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour has been speaking to GP Dr Amir Khan on the ways women are impacted differently by extreme heat. He says:

    • In the second half of the menstrual cycle, progesterone levels rise, which can raise core body temperature by about half a degree
    • During peri-menopause and menopause, oestrogen fluctuations affect the brain so the body can't regulate temperature as well
    • Women sweat less than men so the body's evaporation system "doesn't work as efficiently", Dr Khan said

    Tips to keep cool include:

    • Putting pyjamas in a sealed plastic bag and leaving them in the freezer overnight
    • Doing this with a pillowcase if you don't wear pyjamas
    • Filling a hot water bottle with cold water and bringing it to bed
  8. Why is it so humid? BBC Weather explainspublished at 16:36 BST

    Matt Taylor
    BBC Weather

    Much like you and me picking up bits of our personality from our parents and the friends we’ve met along the way through our lives, weather systems pick up some of their characteristics from where they originated and the environment they have travelled over to get to us.

    While we have seen the air heat up rapidly under a large area area of high pressure or "heat dome" sitting over western Europe this past week, one of the most punishing aspects of this heatwave, the humidity, is down to where the the air in it began its story.

    Tracking the movement of the atmosphere backwards we can tell that a lot of the air we are breathing now actually originated in the warm and humid mid-Atlantic.

    It picked up more moisture as it crossed over the sea and then ended up trapped, circulating around the high pressure system that’s with us now.

    It’s that moisture that has increased humidity levels and along with the heat made days and nights so brutal. By contrast, when we had the record-breaking heat in 2022, the air actually originated in West Africa, travelling up via Iberia to us and was therefore much drier.

  9. Temperatures in parts of England hit 36Cpublished at 16:20 BST
    Breaking

    And the temperature continues to rise - the provisional June record now stands at 36C, which was recorded in Wisley, Surrey.

  10. Why are temperature records 'provisional'?published at 16:09 BST

    Ben Rich
    Lead Weather Presenter

    When a new record temperature is reached, it is almost always described as “provisional”, like today's new June record of 35.7C.

    This is because the Met Office - along with national weather services around the world - has a responsibility to make sure weather and climate records are accurate and consistent, meeting internationally-agreed standards.

    Once a provisional temperature is set, checks will be carried out to make sure the measuring equipment is properly calibrated and that conditions around the site at the time of the observation didn’t have an impact on the readings.

    For instance, a record could be discounted because temporary buildings were erected close to the measuring site or even because the grass or plants close to the weather station were not properly maintained.

    In 2022, a temperature of 35.1C that was recorded at Floors Castle in the Scottish Borders – and provisionally thought to be a new record for Scotland – was discounted because the site didn’t meet Met Office standards.

    This quality control process can take days or weeks, and a record will remain provisional until those checks are completed.

  11. 'Sobering': Climate change will fuel extreme heat, says Met Officepublished at 16:03 BST

    A woman standing on a train platform using a fan to cool herself.Image source, EPA/Shutterstock

    Climate change has led to more frequent and intense heatwaves, says the Met Office's chief scientist.

    Professor Stephen Belcher says human-induced climate change has made events like this "more likely and more intense".

    "To see temperatures like this in the UK in June is sobering," he adds.

    Met Office projections indicate hot spells will become more frequent in the future, particularly over the south-east of the UK.

  12. New provisional June temperature record of 35.7C setpublished at 15:49 BST
    Breaking

    Temperatures have soared to 35.7C in Charlwood, Surrey, surpassing the UK's previous June temperature record from 1976 of 35.6C.

  13. Train services across Wales cancelled due to hot weather, operator sayspublished at 15:41 BST

    BBC Wales News

    Transport for Wales (TfW) has cancelled services across Wales due to extreme heat and a shortage of trains.

    Routes affected are between Manchester and Cardiff, Coryton and Penarth, Ebbw Vale and Cardiff, Bridgend and Maesteg, Chester and Wrexham, Llandudno Junction and Blaenau Ffestiniog, and Pontypridd and Cardiff Bay.

    Most routes will remain cancelled until the end of the day, the operator warns.

  14. People in 23-storey block left climbing the stairs after lift breaks down in heatpublished at 15:33 BST

    Sadaf Maruf
    Your Voice news editor

    Davide and Vanessa got in touch with BBC Your Voice after the third lift in their 23-storey building broke down this week due to the heat.

    The increasing temperatures have taken a toll on the residents of the block in Canary Wharf trying to leave their flats or go home.

    Davide says he had to help a woman with a baby climb up to her flat on the 20th floor yesterday, and there are a few elderly people living in the building's 134 flats.

    He says residents were told it would be within four hours but they are still waiting and have heard nothing since yesterday,

    Vanessa, who rents her flat and has lived in the building for two years, says she had to climb 16 floors with her husky Luna after work using the small airless emergency stairs.

    “Its now been 48 hours in this heat. Its just ridiculous, “ she says. “There are always issues with the lifts but never all three out of order.”

    The company that manages the building, Sanctuary, has apologised for the issues and says in a statement “our lift contractor is working hard to restore them and we are clear on the urgent need to resolve the problems as soon as possible".

    Your Voice banner
  15. Temperatures pass 35C in parts of Englandpublished at 15:20 BST

    Another temperature update - 35.3C has been recorded in Gosport, Hampshire, and Wisley, Surrey.

    We are getting very close to that June record of 35.6C.

    Gosport beachImage source, Solentgirl / BBC Weather Watchers
    Image caption,

    This picture of Gosport was taken this morning by a BBC Weather Watcher

  16. Stick to low impact exercise today, says yoga instructorpublished at 15:11 BST

    Lola Schroer
    BBC News, reporting from Richmond

    A woman wearing sunglasses, speaking into a BBC News branded microphone.
    Image caption,

    Fitness instructor Zhivka Slavova taught a yoga class this morning

    As temperatures continue to soar, people here in Richmond are finding different ways to stay cool.

    Along the riverside, some have been dipping their toes inside, while others have been seeking relief at ice cream vans or retreating to air-conditioned pubs for lunch.

    But despite the heat, not everyone is slowing down.

    Local fitness instructor Zhivka Slavova taught a yoga class this morning and says turnout was still strong.

    She says if people want to stay active during the hot weather it's "important to stay hydrated" and to "prioritise low impact exercise and movement" if you are going to leave the house.

  17. Temperatures soar past 34C in parts of Englandpublished at 14:59 BST

    The highest temperatures recorded so far today have been at Bournemouth Airport and Thorney Island in West Sussex, where it was 34.7C as of 14:00.

    That tops yesterday, when the maximum temperature in England was 34.6C - and it's going to get hotter still.

    Forecasters says the UK’s June temperature record, which stands at 35.6C, could be broken today.

  18. (Not) full steam ahead on the Yorkshire Moorspublished at 14:50 BST

    Rowan Bridge
    North of England reporter

    A steam train on the Yorkshire Moors lineImage source, Getty Images

    The North Yorkshire Moors Railway, which operates steam trains, says it’s switching to diesel locomotives on parts of its route because of the weather.

    The volunteer-run railway says it’s taken the decision because of the increased risk of triggering fires by the line in the heatwave.

    It says problems could be caused by sparks coming out of the train’s chimneys potentially starting fires.

    It’s switched to diesel for the route which runs between Pickering and Grosmont through the North Yorkshire Moors.

    It’s still running steam trains in the areas at lower risk between Grosmont and Whitby, but says it’s monitoring the situation.

  19. Factor 50 and keeping cool - the heatwave in picspublished at 14:39 BST

    A man with suncream on his back on a beach. A woman rubs it into his back while holding an umbrella.Image source, EPA/Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    A man readies himself - with a little help - for the sun's rays at Margate

    A classroom full of young children sitting cross-legged with ice lollies in their hands and mouths. They are all in school uniforms.Image source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Pupils at Harris Academy Primary Mayflower school are keeping cool during a maths lesson with ice lollies

    Two people sit on a step, hiding underneath a banister above it to remain in shade while the sun beats down above them.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    People are looking for all manner of way to find some shade

    Several punt rides across a river in Cambridge. Many people aboard the boats are holding umbrellas to shield themselves from the sun.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    And what a day to be punting on the River Cam in Cambridge

  20. 'It's going to be absolutely dreadful'published at 14:31 BST

    Yasmin Malik
    BBC Newsbeat

    A man wearing a light coloured top, sitting in a vehicle.Image source, Jake Bird
    Image caption,

    No working from home for engineer Jake

    Telecoms engineer Jake Bird is among those who can't avoid the sun when he's at work.

    The 21-year-old from Oxfordshire spends his working day climbing up telephone poles in full PPE and a harness.

    He says he plans to keep working as he's self-employed but will have to take strategic cooling breaks.

    Jake adds: "Here it’s going to be 36 degrees and that is just insane, especially going up a pole in all that kit and everything. It’s just going to be absolutely dreadful."