Festival-goers to bask in sunshine before wet and windy weather takes hold…reports Asian Lite News
Britain is bracing for another burst of hot weather over the August bank holiday, with temperatures forecast to climb as high as 30C, capping what forecasters say is already shaping up to be one of the hottest summers on record.
Large crowds are expected to descend on London’s Notting Hill Carnival, the Reading and Leeds festivals, and Creamfields in Cheshire over the long weekend, with conditions set to become increasingly warm and sunny by Monday. The bright spell, however, will prove fleeting. From Tuesday, the remnants of Hurricane Erin are predicted to sweep across the country, bringing wind, rain and a return to more unsettled conditions.
The Met Office said last week that although summer is not yet over, 2025 is already on course to rank among the warmest Britain has ever experienced. This year has seen four separate heatwaves since June, each testing the resilience of transport systems, straining agriculture and heightening concerns about the impact of climate change.
While Monday promises a late-summer scorcher, travellers may face difficulties in reaching or returning from events. A strike on the CrossCountry rail network is expected to cause major disruption, with no trains running on most routes on Sunday and Monday. The operator has urged passengers not to travel unless absolutely necessary.
Services will only operate from Birmingham towards Penzance, Paignton, Bournemouth and Guildford. There will be no trains between Birmingham, Reading and the south coast, or between Leicester, Cambridge and Stansted Airport.
Adding to the difficulties, engineering work will close London King’s Cross station over the weekend, meaning no LNER services will operate in or out of the capital. Festival-goers returning from Leeds may face particularly challenging journeys.
The RNLI has also issued warnings for those planning coastal trips, urging beachgoers to stick to lifeguarded beaches and to take care in the water. Rough seas are expected as the remnants of Hurricane Erin approach, particularly from Tuesday onwards.
Temperatures on Sunday are forecast to reach around 24C, with dry but largely cloudy conditions. By Monday, warm tropical air drawn northwards by the hurricane system will bring highs close to 30C across southern England and parts of Wales. Scotland and Northern Ireland will remain cooler, with temperatures in the low 20s.
Yet forecasters caution the warmth will not last. Erin, which skirted the Caribbean and the east coast of the United States earlier this week, is expected to drag in cooler and wetter weather as it crosses the Atlantic. Rain is likely to spread widely from Tuesday, with showers lingering through much of the week. Strong winds, however, are expected to remain largely offshore.
This summer’s repeated heatwaves have already caused significant disruption, from wildfires to water shortages. Long dry spells have forced millions of households into hosepipe bans, many of which could remain in place into the winter.
The agricultural sector has been particularly hard hit. The Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board has warned that Britain is heading towards one of its worst harvests on record. Farmers are reporting poor yields across a range of crops, raising fears about both food supply and prices.
Jeremy Clarkson, who runs a farm in Oxfordshire and documents his experiences in the television series Clarkson’s Farm, recently described the outlook as “catastrophic”. Writing on social media earlier this month, he said: “It looks like this year’s harvest will be catastrophic.”
Scientists caution against linking any single weather event directly to climate change. However, they argue that the pattern of longer, hotter and more frequent heatwaves seen this year bears the fingerprints of a warming climate.
Four separate bouts of extreme heat, arriving after an unusually warm spring, suggest that Britain is experiencing the effects of global shifts in weather systems. Researchers say rising global temperatures are amplifying the likelihood of such extremes, while also altering seasonal patterns. There are already reports of autumnal changes occurring early in parts of the UK, as plants and animals respond to the unusually prolonged heat.
For now, Britons will be hoping to make the most of Monday’s sunshine, whether at festivals, barbecues or seaside outings. The warm conditions offer a welcome respite before the unsettled weather returns.
But the fleeting nature of the heat — and the disruption it has already caused — highlights the challenges of coping with increasingly volatile summers. With 2025 already poised to be one of the hottest years in UK history, the country is confronting a future where such extremes are likely to become more common.
The bank holiday may bring a final taste of summer warmth, but the shadow of Hurricane Erin and the growing toll on farms, transport and water supplies point to a deeper story: Britain’s climate is changing, and the nation is being forced to adapt.