Heat alerts have been issued for big parts of UK as a country could see record June temperature this week.
The Ministry of Industry and Trade reported that a second level warning had been issued. for a lot of of southern and central England, with lower level one anxiety in place for north of England.
Alert scale with four levels, designed to help medical workers cope with menstruation of extreme temperatures.
Forecasters said that some parts of England may experience heatwave at the end of this week, with hot air over Spain, Portugal and France are drifting further north over in next several days.
sky news weather producer Joanna Robinson said: “It will be very warm for the hottest in parts of central and southern England from Wednesday, with temperatures are likely to peak on Friday.
“Height of 34C (93F) possible somewhere in South East England – last the time we reached this value was back in august 2020.
“There is small chance we could reach or surpass UK June record of 35.6C (96F) recorded at Mayflower Park in Southampton. back in 1976”.
If the temperature predictions are accurate, the details of the southeast will be hotter than Portugal, Jamaica, Costa Rica, the Canary Islands and Cyprus.
Mercury can rise up to 25C in Wales and the South West on Friday, 28C in Northwest and 27C in northeast.
Met Office Deputy Chief Meteorologist Dan Rudman said the temperature forecasts were unusual. for at that time of year.
He said: “Many areas will also see some warm nights with expected minimum temperature in high teens or even low 20Cs for a little for the night.”
highest temperature reached in UK is still year it was 27.5C (81.5F) at Heathrow on May 17th.
Weather check: enter your location to see the local forecast
A heat wave is defined as three consecutive days of with daily maximum temperatures that match or exceed the temperature of the heat wave threshold.
The representative of the Environmental Protection Agency stated that the risk of drought, but warned that it would continue to be hot, dry weather could put pressure on on some areas.
The British Red Cross called people protect yourself and check in with vulnerable friends, family and neighbors during high temperatures.
Meanwhile, charities have warned pet owners of the dangers. of hot weather impact on animals ahead of in spike in temperatures this week.
RSPCA calls dog owners should be aware of danger of walk your pets, especially with thick coat and concomitant diseases – in the warm season.
Blue Cross urges cat owners to be careful when grooming windows opened after a kitten fell from the third floor and broke his leg.
In the other place in Europe, Spain experiences earliest heat wave in more over 40 years old with temperature above 40°C (104°F) in central and southern parts of country.

