he Bureau of Meteorology Released the first extreme ever heat As the country is sweltering in the heat wave, a warning was issued late Monday.
Extremely hot recommendations continue until the end of Thursday.
The Meteorological Bureau’s Amber warned that people may experience some adverse health effects, including sunburn or heat stroke (dehydration, nausea, fatigue) and other heat-related illnesses.
They added that the possibility of some thermal systems and equipment malfunctioning has increased, leading to power outages and other service interruptions in some homes and businesses.
A milder yellow warning was also issued after a thunderstorm that formed in southeastern England on Monday night could cause flooding, travel delays and damage to buildings.
Summer British heat wave (July 2021)
Emergency service On Sunday, three teenagers and a man in his 50s drowned. A man also fell to his death from a rock in Dorset. Police said another body was found in a lake in Sheffield.
Britain is expected to get hotter, with temperatures expected to reach 32 degrees.
Records were set in England and Wales on Sunday, and mercury levels are expected to be higher on Monday.
On Sunday in England, the temperature at Heathrow Airport was 31.6C, surpassing the record of 30.3C set in Elm Cotton, Derbyshire on Saturday.
Wales recorded 30.2C (in Cardiff, and Saturday in Usk, Monmouthshire, reached 29.6C (85.28F).



