Met office: December 2015 has seen record-breaking levels of rain
With a couple of days to go the Met Office is already saying that during December 2015 many parts of the UK have experienced record-breaking levels of recorded rainfall.
Here is a selection of the highest two day rainfall totals from Met Office observing sites for Christmas Day and Boxing Day:
This wet spell has added to the heavy rainfall through the rest of the month to make December 2015 already the wettest on record in parts of the UK.
Here is a small selection of new December records from Met Office observing stations around the UK for December to date:
Clearly for the next few weeks at least getting everyone through the winter should take priority over post-mortems or allocating blame. But we're going to have to sit down as a country and review our flood prevention programme in the light of this winter's weather and the consequences and ask very seriously if more needs to be done.
Here is a selection of the highest two day rainfall totals from Met Office observing sites for Christmas Day and Boxing Day:
48hr UK RAINFALL TOTALS 9am 25 DEC – 9am 27 DEC 2015 | |||
SITE | AREA | RAINFALL TOTAL (MM) | |
CAPEL CURIG | GWYNEDD | 210.6 | |
STONYHURST | LANCASHIRE | 100 | |
PATELEY BRIDGE, RAVENS NEST | NORTH YORKSHIRE | 97 | |
BINGLEY | WEST YORKSHIRE | 93.6 | |
BAINBRIDGE | NORTH YORKSHIRE | 89.8 | |
BALA | GWYNEDD | 89.4 | |
SHAP | CUMBRIA | 86.4 | |
SPADEADAM | CUMBRIA | 79.4 | |
PRESTON, MOOR PARK | LANCASHIRE | 73.2 | |
MYERSCOUGH | LANCASHIRE | 72.4 | |
BRADFORD | WEST YORKSHIRE | 69.4 | |
ROCHDALE | GREATER MANCHESTER | 68.2 | |
MORECAMBE | LANCASHIRE | 65.8 | |
MONA | ISLE OF ANGLESEY | 63.6 | |
KIELDER CASTLE | NORTHUMBERLAND | 61.2 | |
DISHFORTH AIRFIELD | NORTH YORKSHIRE |
60.8
|
Here is a small selection of new December records from Met Office observing stations around the UK for December to date:
Site | Total (mm) | 81-10 avg (mm) | Previous record |
Shap (Cumbria) | 773.2 | 215.6 | 504.4mm in 2006 |
Keswick (Cumbria) | 517.6 | 173 | 376.4mm in 2013 |
Warcop Range (Cumbria) | 281.6 | 94.1 | 218.4mm in 2006 |
Stonyhurst (Lancashire) | 331.4 | 141.6 | 319.3mm in 1951 |
Morecambe (Lancashire) | 281.4 | 109.2 | 272mm in 1909 |
Bainbridge (North Yorkshire) | 496.2 | 156.5 | 327.2mm in 2006 |
Bingley (West Yorkshire) | 241.4 | 114.3 | 247.2mm in 2006 |
Eskdalemuir (Dumfries and Galloway) | 500 | 184.9 | 390.4mm in 2014 |
Clearly for the next few weeks at least getting everyone through the winter should take priority over post-mortems or allocating blame. But we're going to have to sit down as a country and review our flood prevention programme in the light of this winter's weather and the consequences and ask very seriously if more needs to be done.
Comments
We know its coming, it always has. but building on flood plains is pretty much asking for it.
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Cumbria has many known flood plains, it rains a lot here. We call it the lake district for a reason. Building homes and business property's on them has to be one of my pet hates.