The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for floods in some parts of the UK this week. Travellers have been told to expect disruption and delays
Brits have been issued a warning ahead of a shift in weather conditions which could see flooding across the UK.
Forecasters have stressed that heavy rain could spark travel disruption and powercuts in western Britain at the start of this week.
According to the Met Office, disastrous flooding is expected to hit some areas between Tuesday and Wednesday. In total, 37 areas have been plunged under a yellow weather warning.
The Met Office said in a statement: “A spell of heavy and persistent rain is expected to move north across western Britain during Tuesday into early Wednesday.
“Whilst there is some uncertainty in where the heaviest rain will fall, 20-40 mm of rain is expected fairly widely.
“A few places may see 50-75 mm of rain during this period: gradually building up in the west following rain on Monday, whilst in parts of the east, falling in shorter periods where heavy showers and thunderstorms become slow-moving.”
Met Office spokesman Craig Snell said from Tuesday, there will be “plenty of wet weather”, particularly in England and Wales. Towards the end of the week and into the long Easter weekend, he said it would become a “changeable picture”.
Speaking about the shift in weather conditions, he said: “Some places will see rain, others some sunshine, depending on where you are in the UK on Thursday and Friday one day will be wetter than the other.
“Not cold by any means, but compared to the first week of the Easter holidays, the second week does look like a bit more of a mixed bag across the UK.”
Regions and local authorities affected:
North West England
- Cheshire West and Chester
- Halton
- Merseyside
South West England
- Bath and North East Somerset
- Bristol
- Cornwall
- Devon
- Gloucestershire
- North Somerset
- Plymouth
- Somerset
- South Gloucestershire
- Torbay
Wales
- Blaenau Gwent
- Bridgend
- Caerphilly
- Cardiff
- Carmarthenshire
- Ceredigion
- Conwy
- Denbighshire
- Flintshire
- Gwynedd
- Isle of Anglesey
- Merthyr Tydfil
- Monmouthshire
- Neath Port Talbot
- Newport
- Pembrokeshire
- Powys
- Rhondda Cynon Taf
- Swansea
- Torfaen
- Vale of Glamorgan
- Wrexham
West Midlands
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