Times-Herald

UK weather turmoil spurs calls to adapt to climate change

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LONDON (AP) — Britain's record-breaking heatwave has spurred calls for the government to speed up efforts to adapt to a changing climate, especially after wildfires created the busiest day for London firefighte­rs since bombs rained down on the city during World War II.

The country got a break Wednesday from the dry, hot weather that is gripping much of Europe as cooler air moved in from the west. Forecaster­s predict London will reach a high of 26 degrees Celsius (79 Fahrenheit) on Wednesday, down from the national record 40.3 C (104.4 F) set Tuesday at Coningsby in eastern England.

Even so, travel was disrupted for a third day as rail operators repaired damage caused by the heat, and firefighte­rs continue to mop up hotspots at the scene of Tuesday's fires.

Britain needs to prepare for similar heatwaves in the future because manmade carbon emissions have already changed the climate, said Professor Stephen Belcher, chief scientist at the Met Office, the U.K.'s national weather service. Only aggressive emissions reductions will reduce the frequency of such events, he said.

"Everything is still to play for, but we should adapt to the kind of events we saw yesterday as an occasional extreme event," Baker told the BBC.

Climate scientists have been surprised by the speed at which temperatur­es in Britain have risen in recent years and the widespread area affected by this week's event. Thirty-four locations around the U.K. on Tuesday broke the country's previous record-high temperatur­e of 37.8 C (100 F), set in 2019.

The weather walloped a country where few homes,* schools or small businesses have air conditioni­ng and infrastruc­ture such as railroads, highways and airports aren't designed to cope with such temperatur­es. Thirteen people, including seven teenage boys, are believed to have died trying to cool off after getting into difficulty in rivers, reservoirs and lakes.

Fifteen fire department­s declared major incidents as more than 60 properties around the country were destroyed on Tuesday, Cabinet Office Minister Kit Malthouse told the House of Commons.

One of the biggest fires was in Wennington, a village on the eastern outskirts of London, where a row of houses was destroyed by flames that raced through tinder-dry fields nearby. Resident Tim Stock said he and his wife fled after the house next door caught fire and the blaze rapidly spread.

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