
Why deleting emails could prevent water droughts from worsening
The Environment Agency is urging the public to reduce water consumption through traditional methods and by deleting old emails.
This advice is due to large data centres, which store cloud-based files like emails and photos, requiring vast amounts of water for cooling.
Drought has been declared in several English regions, including Yorkshire, Cumbria, Lancashire, Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Cheshire, the East Midlands, and the West Midlands.
Hosepipe bans are in force for customers of various water companies, and largely dry conditions are forecast to continue across the country.
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BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Rolls Royce mystery forces Plymouth Tinside Lido closure
A Devon seafront lido has been closed to swimmers to allow a Rolls Royce car to use the City Council said Tinside Lido, on the Hoe, was shut to swimmers on Friday for an "activity hosted by a prestigious British brand" with more details expected to be released later in the gathered on Hoe Road, which overlooks the pool, where they could see a black Rolls Royce car with a silver bonnet on a submerged plinth in the water with a film crew around the outside of the council apologised to people keen to swim in temperatures forecast to go above 20C (68F) but explained that it was "a unique and exciting opportunity to showcase Plymouth". 'It's brilliant' Among those watching was Doug Cooper who said his wife had been hoping to go for a said he thought the situation was "a bit of fun and not a problem".He added: "It might have disrupted some people's plans but, at the end of the day, I think it's brilliant."Dana Stallard said she swam in the lido every weekend when she was growing up in Plymouth and thought what was happening was "wonderful" for the town."I think it brings holidaymakers down and everybody's out looking at it so it's nice to see what's going on," she added.


The Sun
3 hours ago
- The Sun
Revive brown patches in your lawn this August with ‘grey water' – you'll have ‘healthier, greener' grass & save on bills
YOUR brown and patchy lawn will look healthy and revived if you use a leftover kitchen product this autumn. With the UK now in its fourth heatwave of the summer, its safe to say that many lawns across the country will not be looking their best. 2 2 And with hosepipe bans in place for many parts of the UK, it can be tricky to know the best way to revive them. Thankfully, experts have revealed a simple trick that not only makes your lawn look lush and green, but will save you money on your water bill too. Grey water Grey water is wastewater that comes from your home, such as bathwater, and water used to boil pasta or vegetables. Vegetable water is rich in nutrients, nitrogen and potassium, meaning that it can make your lawn grow back healthier than before. Plus, since you're already using it to boil your veg, it won't cost you a penny to use it on your lawn. However, it is important to note that you should wait until the water has cooled down before pouring it on your lawn, as boiling water will kill the grass. Experts from Lawn & Weed add that although grey water is safe to use on lawns, you shouldn't use it to water any fruit or veg that you are planning to consume, as it contains chemicals that can be harmful if ingested by humans. The experts added that you should place the water on your lawn no longer than 24 hours after you've collected it, as the longer you leave it, the more likely pathogens are to develop. "Letting the grey water stand for a while after you've collected it is a great way to allow particles and contaminants to settle at the bottom" ,the experts said. "You can then use the water nearest the top to give your plants a drink." We made our boring new build garden a Love Island style haven with bar & hot tub, but trolls say detail 'ruined our day' More lawns hacks Gardening experts have also revealed that scattering tea leaves on your lawn can act as a natural fertiliser. Tea leaves are packed with essential nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, all of which are critical for healthy plant growth including grass. They can also enhance the structure of your soil and its water retention capacity, creating optimal growing conditions for your grass and improving its overall appearance. Lawn Love reveals: "Compost tea isn't a warm drink to savour by the crackling fire. "But your lawn (and your garden plants) would love to glug some down. "According to the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, applying compost tea to the lawn helps spread beneficial microbes onto soil and plants. "Compost tea also helps protect your turf from disease. "The organisms in compost tea will consume available food sources and help outcompete disease organisms. "The homemade fertiliser increases soil water retention, too."


Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Telegraph
Why your nostalgia for the summer of 1976 is wrong
The further away the long, steamy summer of 1976 gets, the greater its mythical status becomes, it seems. Every time the thermometer pushes 30 degrees, hoary phrases like 'but it isn't as hot as it was back then' or 'we survived 1976, it can't get worse' are wheeled out with remarkable regularity. But a closer look at historical weather data reveals a more complicated picture. In many ways, the summer of 1976 was Britain's first real taste of a new normal. While it was undeniably hot and dry by the standards of the time, recent years have delivered summers that match – or even surpass – its extremes. While the average highest recorded temperature in the UK between June and August was 21°C, with a searing peak of 35.9°C recorded in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire on July 3, what truly embedded 1976 in the public memory was the extraordinary length of its heatwave. In the UK, a heatwave is defined as a period of at least three consecutive days where daily maximum temperatures meet or exceed a threshold of around 28 degrees (though the Met Office applies slightly different thresholds to different regions in the country). Most UK heatwaves last for only three or four days, but in 1976, multiple locations in England recorded a 16 consecutive days of temperatures exceeding 30 degrees, from 23 June to 8 July. To this day, that heatwave remains unmatched in terms of its duration. But the 35.9 degrees recorded in Cheltenham has been surpassed on multiple occasions, most recently in 2022 when the mercury reached a staggering 40.3 degrees in Coningsby in Lincolnshire on 19 July. Even this year, it reached 35.8 degrees in Faversham, Kent on July 1. The difference between 35°C and 40°C may seem to some as just varying degrees of heat but, meteorologically speaking, it is critical. 'When you are talking about really high temperatures, even the difference of a degree is significant – especially in terms of mortality rates,' Dr Laura Baker, senior NCAS scientist in the Department of Meteorology at the University of Reading, explains. 'Shorter, more intense, very very hot periods have more of an impact than a 16-day hot-but-not-excessively-hot, period,' she added. The 1976 heatwave was estimated to have led to 700 extra deaths in the UK. In the record-breaking summer of 2022 there were an estimated 2,985 excess deaths associated with heat. One major factor worsening modern heatwaves and increasing the number of heat-related deaths is the growing prevalence of so-called 'tropical nights', which is where the minimum daily temperature (often recorded at night) is above 20 degrees. 'In 1976, even with that long period, there were no tropical nights,' Dr Baker explained. 'In terms of how you experience a heatwave, that makes a difference. If it doesn't cool down at night, you can't cool your house down.' This is especially dangerous for elderly or vulnerable individuals who rely on cooler nighttime temperatures to recover from the day's heat. And according to Dr Baker, we'll see more of these 'hot sticky nights' in the near future as heatwaves across the UK – and across the entire Northern Hemisphere for that matter – are becoming more intense, hot, and occurring more frequently. According to the State of the UK Climate in 2024 report, the UK's climate has steadily warmed from the 1980s onwards, with great consequences for our average daily temperature. 'If we look at the UK's average summer temperature, we can see that 1976 was the UK's warmest year on record until 2003,' its lead author Mike Kendon, climate information scientist in the Met Office National Climate Information Centre, says. 'But since then there have been four years close to or above the 1976 value.' The summer of 1976 has one more climate record that still holds weight: the severe drought. According to climate scientists, a drought like that is unlikely to occur in that extremity again (but never say never). The reason it happened in 1976 was because of some very specific preceding conditions. Rainfall was scarce throughout 1975 and the early part of 1976. The intense and prolonged summer heat of 1976 exacerbated these dry conditions, leaving reservoirs depleted before many people even started celebrating their summer holidays, culminating in widespread water shortages across the country. Consecutive years have also brought droughts and low rainfall. Many will remember how hosepipe bans affected much of the south during prolonged dry spells in 2012. This year too – one of the driest on record – saw bans reinstated across both north and south England in July. But while 2025 has been notably dry, it's a relatively isolated year. 2024 ranked amongst the wettest on record, leaving reservoirs and water supplies in a slightly stronger position to withstand this year's dry spring and summer. What also sets 1976 apart, and helps explain its lasting hold on public memory, is not just the severity of the drought, but how unprepared the country was for it. There were no heat action plans, no warning systems. People had to find their own ways to cope. 'The UK would have been less equipped for extreme heat and drought back in 1976 compared to now, and this may be a reason why people still cite the 1976 heatwave as one of the most impactful or memorable to them,' Dr Eunice Lo, senior research fellow in Climate Change and Health at the University of Bristol, said. Government advice at the time was extremely basic and mostly focused on water rationing. People were told to 'bathe with a friend' and to only flush the toilet for solid waste. One casualty doctor suggested the best thing you could have in the heat was a pint and a packet of salty crisps – something the UK Health Security Agency heavily advises against now. A Minister for Drought was appointed. But only at the very end of the drought, days before the rain returned. 'We know that more recent heatwaves were actually hotter than the 1976 event, but in general we have gotten better at coping with heat since then,' Dr Lo explained. Nowadays, the Met Office can issue 'Extreme Heat' warnings, which did not exist in 1976. In fact, the direct public health messaging recommending people to stay indoors and drink lots of fluids that we see now only became standard after the 2003 heatwave. 'The key here is, of course, that we all listen to the warnings and take actions to protect ourselves and others,' Dr Lo points out. This presents another stark difference between the summer of 1976 and recent heatwaves. At the peak of the drought in 1976, water was switched off in some areas. Domestic water supply was limited, which meant people had to diligently collect their water at standpipes. 'You really couldn't imagine that kind of thing now,' Dr Baker says. 'People just couldn't cope. There is less community and everyone is just so desperate for everything to be available. You can't imagine people just going down the street and standing in a queue with a bucket.' It's highly unlikely that a situation like this will unfold again any time soon but, as a result of climate change, the weather has undoubtedly changed and will continue to do so. In the current climate of the UK, the 1976 summer no longer stands out as extreme. 'It was really really exceptional [at the time] but now it just wouldn't be,' Dr Baker says. 'It would just be another summer, quite hot, but not exceptional.' Yet 1976 remains a cultural reference point, a sort of gold standard of heat and hardship. Possibly because it marked the moment when the UK first began to realise just how much hot weather could disrupt everyday life. 'Water boards still consider 1976 as their benchmark drought, the thing they need to be prepared for,' Dr Baker explains. 'The question is, should they not be planning for something more extreme? Because it could happen.'