Senior government officials held an important meeting to declare the first heat wave emergency in England (Britain). The meeting was called on Monday as a fortune teller predicted that the records for the hottest British day could be solved in the coming days, with temperatures expected to surge through the 104 degrees of Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius) for the first time, the telegraph reported. If that happens, there will be a danger that might occur in life, the outlet says further, quoting weather officials in the UK.
The COBRA crisis meeting was held in the Downing Street to determine whether the national emergency “level four” was needed after the Met office issued a yellow weather warning for most Britain, showing a sharp increase in temperature.
According to the British Health Security Agency (UKHSA), the “Level four” National Emergency “is stated when hot weather is very extreme so that” disease and death can occur among healthy and healthy people “and vulnerable people.
If applied, it can cause broad disruption to school, travel, health services, and even nuclear power plants.
“There is a possibility of a level of heat level four. If you get above 40C, then it is likely to be a level of level four heat for the first time. I don’t see how it can’t be at that temperature,” a UKHSA UKHSA spokesman told the telegraph.
East Midlands, Eastern England, London, Southeast, Northeast, northwestern, Southwest, Wales, Midlands Western and Yorkshire and Humber will be borne by the most steep climate emergency in the UK, Sky News reports.
On Monday, the soaring temperature triggered a wooden block in London, which caused the railroad tracks on the bridge to burn. According to Express, the incident occurred on the track between Wandsworth Road and London Victoria.