The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Wintry weather disrupts UK power, flights and roads

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LONDON: Britain suffered power outages and travel disruption, with flights delayed because of brief runway closures as adverse weather hit large swathes of the country.

More than 73,000 homes were left without power in central and southern English regions through the morning, due to snow and high winds.

Western Power Distributi­on – serving 7.8 million customers in western and central England and Wales – said 52,705 households had been restored by 4pm (1600 GMT), with another 1,500 to be back by midnight.

Scottish and Southern Electricit­y Networks, covering some of the other areas impacted, said it had restored power to 17,100 customers by lunchtime. Another 1,800 remained without electricit­y by the evening.

Meanwhile Stansted Airport, serving predominan­tly low-cost carriers like Ryanair and easyJet, twice temporaril­y shut its runway due to ‘adverse weather conditions’.

“Incoming and departing flights have been disrupted, with some flights cancelled,” a spokeswoma­n told AFP.

Flights were also cancelled or delayed at Luton Airport – also a hub for budget airlines just north of London – after aircraft needed de-icing. The airport restricted plane numbers to prevent congestion on the ground, a spokesman said.

Large parts of Britain experience­d at least some snowfall, alongside near-freezing temperatur­es and gusty winds. Wales, western England and Scotland saw the worst of the weather. Sennybridg­e in Powys, Mid Wales, recorded the largest snow total with 6 centimetre­s, the Met Office, Britain’s weather service, reported.

On the roads, a spate of accidents caused traffic delays, with the main M1 motorway along the spine of the country severely impacted by southbound lane closures. The latest disruption comes just over two weeks after hundreds of schools were closed, homes left without power, and airports disrupted by a previous round of snowfall.

Richard Dawson, an engineerin­g professor at Newcastle University who specialise­s in climate impact on infrastruc­ture, told AFP Britain suffers from ‘an intermitte­ncy issue’ in coping with adverse weather.

He explained the country does not receive snow regularly enough to justify the kind of expenditur­e needed for a more impressive response to when it does, intermitte­ntly, occur.

“So I guess the organisati­ons are trying to find a sensible balance,” he added. — AFP

 ??  ?? Passengers are stranded at the Stansted airport after cold snap hits London in this still image taken from a video. — Reuters photo
Passengers are stranded at the Stansted airport after cold snap hits London in this still image taken from a video. — Reuters photo

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