
Here comes the heat! Amber alert warning in the south of England as 'killer' heatwave peaks at 32C and second hosepipe ban to hit one million Brits
The mercury is expected to rocket to 32C today in parts of central and southern England with the East Midlands, West Midlands, East of England, London, South East and South West under amber alert.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKSHA) upgraded their previously yellow heat health warning to an amber one in these areas today with the North East, North West and Yorkshire and Humber to be covered by a yellow heat health alert from midday.
Their website warns rising temperatures will have 'significant impacts' including 'a rise in deaths' - particularly among those aged 65 and above or with health conditions.
The UKSHA predicts an 'increased demand on all health and social care services' and that the heat will have an impact on 'the ability of the workforce to deliver services'.
The alert comes into effect at 12pm today (Friday) and will continue until 9am on Monday, following two other amber alerts issued in consecutive weeks at the end of June amid two separate heatwaves.
The alert for the first heatwave on June 19 was the first time an amber alert had been issued since September 2023.
It comes as a second hosepipe ban has been introduced in Kent and Sussex with thousands of customers in Yorkshire already restricting their water usage.
Bournemouth beach was full of families enjoying the hot weather on Friday
Those supplied by South East Water will not be able to use their hosepipes for any reason from July 18.
The company said the region has endured its driest spring since 1893 and has had to supply up to 680million litres of water in 24 hours as temperatures soar, adding: 'This situation has left us with no choice but to restrict the use of hosepipes and sprinklers, so we can help our reservoirs and underground water storage recover.'
South East Water added that it will prosecute those who disobey the ban by slapping them with fines of up to £1,000.
Meanwhile, a hosepipe ban begins today in Yorkshire as the third heatwave of the summer heads towards temperatures of 33C.
Yorkshire Water has placed a ban on using hosepipes for activities such as watering the garden, cleaning cars and filling paddling pools in an attempt to protect water supplies in the face of yet more dry weather.
Similar to its southern counterpart, it means customers are banned from using a hosepipe to water gardens and plants, clean vehicles, fill swimming pools or ponds or clean paths, walls or windows.
Customers flouting the ban could face fines of up to £1,000, but the company has said 'we hope it won't come to that' as it urged households to help conserve water by sticking to the restrictions.
The new ban, which will affect more than 5.7million homes in Yorkshire, Derbyshire and North Lincolnshire, comes after 80 firefighters were called to tackle a grass fire yesterday in Rainham, Essex.
London Fire Brigade said about ten hectares of grass and shrubland were destroyed in the blaze on Rainham Road, the cause of which is being investigated.
Meanwhile, temperatures in Northern Ireland are set to reach around 25C over the weekend.
Data from the Met Office forecasts temperatures to reach 26C and to rise over the coming days.
Water Safety Ireland urged anyone visiting the beach to enter the water slowly.
It said: 'Whether you're swimming, surfing, or paddleboarding, make safety your top priority.
'Enter the water slowly to avoid cold water shock. Supervise children and hold their hand near water. Never use inflatables in open water.'
Across the Irish Sea, central Scotland will see temperatures soar to 28C with its capital Edinburgh baking in 27C.
As the country prepares for the very warm weather, the Royal National Lifeboat Institution has urged families to put safety first.
The RNLI urged people to visit a lifeguarded beach and swim between the red and yellow flag, to check the weather forecast and tide times, and to read local hazard signage to understand local risks.
In agreement, the Health and Safety Executive added that the people most at risk during hot weather include babies, young children, people over 65 and those with underlying health conditions, including heart and breathing problems as well as Alzheimer's disease and dementia.
Those who spend a lot of time outside or in hot places - such as those who work outdoors or the homeless - are also at high risk.
Their advice for staying cool indoors is to turn off the lights, close windows that face the sun and open them only at night when temperatures drop.
While outdoors, people should stay in the shade and regularly apply a UVA and UVB water-resistant sunscreen to skin that is not covered.
Factor 30-plus should be used for adults while 50-plus should be applied on children.
People are also advised to drink plenty of fluids.
Water or oral rehydration sachets are considered the best option.
Diving in headfirst! Family enjoys day out at Clevedon's open-air swimming pool as temperatures peak to 32C
While residents in Yorkshire and Sussex are being encouraged to conserve water, exceptions include using hosepipes to clean animals and fill drinking troughs.
People can still wash their car and water their gardens using tap water from a bucket or watering can, while businesses will be allowed to use a hosepipe if it is directly related to an essential commercial purpose - but not for other uses such as cleaning paths outside a business property.
And they're not the only ones, with Thames Water revealing this week that it would impose a hosepipe ban after 'ongoing dry weather and increased customer demand' unless the situation 'changes significantly'.
The forecast for the coming days suggests temperatures could reach 32C in parts of central and southern England on Friday and are expected to remain high into the weekend, with a yellow heat health alert in place for all regions in England until July 15.
The alert, issued by the UK Health Security Agency, warns of the potential for a rise in deaths, particularly among those aged 65 and over, or with health conditions, because of the heat.
In Birmingham the body of a teenage boy was found in a lake yesterday after a huge search operation in a popular water park.
Emergency services descended on Powell's Pool, a large body of water on the edge of the park near the Boldmere area of Sutton Coldfield at around 9pm following reports a boy had gone missing.
Boat crews were seen on the water and the emergency services continued to work after dark, using torches to search the pool.
West Midlands Police are supporting the family of the boy and were not treating the death as suspicious after people flocked to Sutton Park to try and escape the heat.
Possible highs of 33C on Saturday mean the third heatwave will fall short of the top temperatures recorded earlier in July, but will be more widespread, Met Office meteorologist Craig Snell said.
'For the next three days or so, high pressure is in charge across the UK, bringing in relatively settled conditions,' Mr Snell said
'For most of the UK, it will be dry, sunny and warm. The temperatures will probably peak either Friday or Saturday, with highs potentially of 32C or 33C.
'As we go into Sunday, the eastern half of the UK might start to just cool down a tad. It's still going to be very warm, but could jump down a degree or two.
'In the second half of the weekend some coastal areas, like the North Sea coast, may turn a little bit murky at times, but the weekend is generally hot and sunny for most parts of the country.
'That will obviously come with very high UV levels for most of us and also very high grass pollen levels, so not great news for hayfever sufferers.'
The 35.8C (78.4F) at Faversham in Kent on July 1 during the second heatwave of 2025 was the UK's hottest day in three years.
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA) has urged people to drink water regularly, seek shade and use sunscreen.
Steve Cole, policy director at RoSPA, said: 'Heat is no longer just a holiday perk, it's a growing public health risk.
'We're seeing more frequent and intense heatwaves, both in the UK and globally, and the data shows a clear rise in heat-related illness and fatalities.'
Temperatures will fall slightly by Monday, with highs of 28C expected in London and 'fresher' conditions in the north of England, with highs between 20C and 24C.
Rain could come in 'showers and thunderstorms', Mr Snell said, most likely in northern England.
The rain would be a relief for water companies after reservoir levels fell at nearly three-quarters of sites during June and are below average in all regions, with storage at four sites classed as 'exceptionally low'.
These are Blagdon in Somerset (62 per cent), Blithfield in Staffordshire (59 per cent), Derwent Valley in Derbyshire (58 per cent) and Yorkshire Supply Group (55 per cent).
The Environment Agency has also declared a state of 'prolonged dry weather' in large parts of Berkshire, Oxfordshire and Surrey - meaning a heightened risk of drought.
Thames Water said daily demand in Swindon and Oxfordshire peaked during the UK's last heatwave on June 30 at a level not seen since in the 2022 drought.
People are being encouraged to take shorter showers, turn the tap off while brushing teeth and letting their lawn go dry to help reduce big increases in demand.
Water bosses also warned that the extended warm weather was bringing 'increased risks of leaks and bursts due to pipe stress and shifting foundations in the ground'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
35 minutes ago
- Times
Wes Streeting says junior doctors' strike action is ‘unconscionable'
The health secretary has said that junior doctors' actions are 'unconscionable', as a member of his own family is waiting for an 'inevitable' call to tell them their procedure has been cancelled due to the impending strikes. Wes Streeting, speaking at the health and care select committee, said that he 'cannot fathom' why 'any doctor in good conscience would make it harder for managers to make sure we have safe staffing levels'. The comments come after resident doctors, as junior doctors are now known, who are members of the British Medical Association (BMA) voted to strike for five days from July 25. They have demanded a 29 per cent pay rise, which they have said would bring them back to 2008 pay levels. He said: 'We can mitigate against the impact of strikes, and we will, but what we cannot do is promise that there will be no consequence and no delay, no further suffering, because there are lots of people whose procedures are scheduled over that weekend period and in the period subsequently. 'The NHS has to recover from the industrial action, who will see their operations and appointments delayed,' Streeting told the House of Commons' committee. 'I have a relative in that position,' he added. 'My family are currently dreading what I fear is an inevitable phone call saying that there is going to be a delay to this procedure. And I just think this is an unconscionable thing to do to the public, not least given the 28.9 per cent pay rise.' BMA representatives and the health secretary are due to meet this week, 'to see if we can avert strike action', Streeting said. He added that the doctors had 'chosen confrontation' and that he did not see 'a reasonable trade union partner in the RDC section of the BMA at this time'. Streeting added: 'The other thing that I have found actually shockingly irresponsible about the BMA's position is their leaders seem to be telling their members not to inform their trusts or their employers if they're going out on strike. 'Now, I might not agree with the BMA strike action, but I do accept they have a right to strike. I do accept that they follow the rules in order to go on strike. 'What I cannot fathom is how any doctor in good conscience would make it harder for managers to make sure we have safe staffing levels. So I just think the sort of the BMA's approach to this from start to finish has been completely wrong.' Sir Jim Mackey, the NHS England chief, told the committee that the action would be 'hugely disruptive'. In September, junior doctors voted to accept a government pay deal of 22.3 per cent on average over two years. In the most recent pay award, for 2025-2026, junior doctors were given a four per cent uplift, plus £750 — giving an average rise of 5.4 per cent. There aren't many people who would volunteer to be the public face of the most unpopular junior doctor strikes to date. The task has fallen to 'unashamedly socialist' Emma Runswick, the current deputy chairwoman of the council, and one of the highest-ranking junior doctors in the BMA. The daughter of Jeremy Corbyn-backing trade unionists, Runswick has described herself as 'very left wing'. Runwick's mother, Kathy Runswick, is the former chairwoman of the Wallasey Constituency Labour Party. In an interview on the BBC's Today programme on Monday morning, Runswick was asked if she was a 'militant lefty'. In response, she said: 'Oh yeah, I'm left wing. But that doesn't reflect necessarily the whole variety of views that doctors have. And actually it is our aim: if you are on the left, you want the NHS to be an excellent service, you want patients to get good care. I stand by that.' Writing on an online forum under the pseudonym RedRunswick, she wrote before the 2023 strikes: 'This change in attitude has happened because of a concerted organising effort among lefties, and we have pushed the BMA to a slightly more militant position.' When asked if the strikes would 'bring the NHS to its knees', she said: 'We never bring the NHS to its knees, we always leave safe care, emergency critical care is always provided.' She added: 'Our […] repeated overwhelming mandates for strike action show that doctors are fed up of receiving repeated real terms pay cuts. 'Doctors are still starting on less than £18 an hour. I've been qualified over six years, I'm regularly looking after seven or eight wards overnight by myself. I will be the only person with any degree of advanced life support training. I'm earning less than £24 an hour. 'The people who are doing brain surgery at 3am, covering the most critically unwell people, less than £34 an hour. You would pay a plumber more. It is not unreasonable for us to ask for our pay cuts to be reversed.' Runswick's father, Alan, was a member of the Public and Commercial Services Union and also vice-chairman of the Wallasey constituency Labour Party's membership team.


Times
35 minutes ago
- Times
Striking resident doctors can earn more than £100k
Resident doctors preparing to go on strike could earn more than £100,000 per year, and may pick up an additional £159 per hour for some weekend shifts. The resident doctors — formerly known as junior doctors — have voted to undertake more strike action this summer over pay and conditions. Up to 50,000 doctors will walk out of work for five consecutive days from 7am on July 25 until 7am on July 30, and are demanding the government increase their pay by 29 per cent. The starting rate for junior doctors is a salary of £38,831 after pay increases under Labour, but the highest ranking residents can earn up to £73,993 as a basic rate. For those working one in six weekends and one in eight night shifts, earnings can increase to £101,369 per annum, according to an analysis by The Daily Telegraph.


Daily Mail
41 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE I thought my sporty 11-year-old girl had growing pains... it turned out to be an aggressive bone cancer
A family have shared their heartbreak after their 11-year-old daughter's suspected 'growing pains' turned out to be early signs of an aggressive bone cancer. Isabelle Vella, of Cambridgeshire, was once a 'carefree, adventurous and happy' child who frequently enjoyed partaking in triathlon events and spending time with her friends. While she had begun to complain to her parents of nagging pains in her leg in April, her parents assured her that it was simply 'growing pains' or a torn ligament due to her triathlon training. But the reality was to be far worse. Just days later, following a trip to the GP and further X-ray, both her and her parents' lives were 'blown apart' at the devastating news that Isabelle, then limping, had Osteochondroma, a rare bone cancer. Affecting up to 35 children in the UK each year, the condition often starts at the end of the long bones, where new bone tissue forms as a young person grows. Speaking about the devastating diagnosis the family received in April, Isabelle's father, Al Vella, told MailOnline: 'My wife took her to the doctor while I was at work. We just couldn't believe it, my wife collapsed at the hospital. We were both in pieces on the phone. 'Isabelle is very bright, she knew straight away what it was. The ironic thing is that prior to the appointment she had asked us "is it cancer?" and we had told her not to be so ridiculous.' With Isabelle's ongoing recovery set to take several years, her devastated parents have now set up a GoFundMe page to help contribute towards specialist therapies, possible prosthetics, wheelchairs, equipment and even the high likelihood that they will need to adapt their home. Isabelle is currently receiving her second round of chemotherapy treatment and at the start of August faces either an amputation of her right leg or several complex limb salvage operations in which as much of her leg as possible will be saved using bone grafts or metal implants. Despite her intense treatment and frequent hospital visits, Mr Al Vella said that his little girl has continued to 'remain smiling'. As an avid drummer, she even took her Grade three drumming exam just one week after her diagnosis, achieving a Merit grade. Her father added: 'She won't be able to do a triathlon anymore or any contact sports going forward. I have no doubt that she'll find a wheelchair sport in the future, maybe even go towards something like the Paralympics. 'There are so many unknowns at the moment. She's had her ovaries removed and frozen which they can hopefully put back in later in life and a peg in her stomach to feed her. 'She has a massive zest for life but what has been taken away from her has completely destroyed us. We have no option but to carry on and be strong for her.' Meanwhile, her heartbroken mother, Faye Vella, said that while she worries how her daughter will hope with the 'gruelling' rehabilitation process, Isabelle 'surprises us all of the time' with her resilience. Describing how she 'naively' believed her daughter's pain would only be something minor, she added: 'We get our strength from her. She is one of a kind. She is scared but she knows that she needs to go through this. 'I know it sounds silly but it was such a shock to see how poorly the chemo made her. It is devastating seeing your lovely child confined to her bed and not even be able to talk because they feel so ill. Just totally heartbreaking.' Praising the 'incredible' NHS staff at Addenbrooke's Hospital that have continued to treat Isabelle, Ms Vella added: 'When Isabelle was diagnosed I couldn't believe what I was hearing. I don't really remember too much about it, but I asked them to look after Isabelle while I tried to make sense of it. 'The staff literally picked me up the floor and looked after us both.' As the family anxiously prepare for the future ahead and attempt to navigate their young daughter's new reality, Mr and Ms Vella say they are continuing to strive for the 'happiest, most active life possible' for their little 'pocket rocket'. Mr Vella said: 'This tumour has completely changed our world but we are so grateful for Isabelle's quirky and funny nature, she is just a force. 'She chooses not to use the word cancer, calling it Voldermort, a nod to Harry Potter. Despite the pain she's in, she is just so joyful and happy and manages to laugh and smile at things. 'She just wanted to be a triathlete who played the drums. We can't do this alone.' Mr Vella, who said that he had never even heard of Osteochoma prior to his daughter's diagnosis, also issued an urgent warning to parents that may hold reservations or concerns regarding their children's 'aches and pains'. He added: 'My advice to others would be if you have any concerns, get it seen to. 'Any aches or pains with your kids, you just never know what it really could be. 'Keep pursuing, if you think something could be wrong, don't give up in getting an answer. We never could have imagined this could have been the outcome and are so glad we got it checked when we did'. If you want to help Isabelle and her family, visit her GoFundMe.