Will the rest of July get any warmer?
After a cool start to July, is there any chance of the second half of the month warming up?
355 items found
After a cool start to July, is there any chance of the second half of the month warming up?
How long will the UK’s first burst of summer heat last and what will the weather be like for Glastonbury?
The first widespread warmth of summer is expected into next week, following a chilly start to June.
The first 10 days of June have been cooler than average for most of us. Are there any signs of summer-like warmth?
Earth has just had its 12th consecutive month with record-high temperatures, according to Copernicus. What does this mean for our weather?
The UK has just had its warmest spring and May on record, according to the Met Office. What does the forecast for June and summer hold?
Labour has denied reports it’s offering peerages to former MPs so it can parachute so-called “Starmtroopers” – Keir Starmer’s chosen candidates – into their seats.
Even before the latest conflict in the Middle East erupted, a record 110 million people around the world were already displaced by conflict, persecution or the impacts of climate change – that’s according to the UN’s Refugee Agency.
This summer has already been marked as another year with record-breaking heat right across the globe, from China to North Africa and North America to Europe. In the past week at least 34 people died from spreading wildfires in Algeria, while in the Greek island of Rhodes thousands were evacuated due to wildfires following extreme…
There’s been more disruption for rail passengers as members of the RMT union staged another day of strike action in their pay dispute affecting train services around the country.
Up to half a million striking workers made today the biggest mass action in the UK since 2011.
Ministers have been deployed defending the government’s strike contingency plans and pay offers.
The weekend before Christmas is traditionally the busiest for retailers but trading has been hit today by the continuation of the 48-hour rail strike.
With talks between train companies and the RMT union deadlocked, rail workers today began the latest in a series of 48-hour walkouts, bringing fresh misery to commuters and Christmas shoppers.
Britain’s Christmas of discontent began in earnest today as the railways ground to a halt for the first – but not the last – time this month.