Parts of the UK will continue to be beset by snow and ice on Tuesday – with the potential for the country to experience the coldest night of the year for a second day running. The Met Office has issued a yellow snow and ice warning covering northern Scotland and north-east England from midnight on Tuesday until noon on Thursday.
A separate snow and ice warning covers the Shetland Islands until midnight tonight. There is also an ice warning covering much of the South East, including London and Brighton from 9am on Monday until 11am on Tuesday.
Met Office spokesman Oli Claydon said there will be heavy snow in some places again on Tuesday. “Coming into force at midnight tonight all the way through to lunchtime on Thursday, (there is a) large snow and ice warning covering the North East of England, the whole sort of northern portion of Scotland, as well as the Highlands and islands,” he said.
He said there could be “as much as 15 to 20 centimetres of snow accumulating over high ground”. Mr Claydon said northern Scotland could record even colder temperatures on Tuesday after breaking the record for the coldest night of the year on Monday.
“In terms of temperature, we could see another very cold night, especially in parts of Scotland where we’ve got that lying snow,” he said. “We saw minus 15C last night. We could see similar or potentially even colder tonight under clear skies with that snowfall lying in some places.
“So a very cold night there but also broadly very cold across the whole of the UK, with widespread freezing conditions.”
Mr Claydon urged commuters across the UK to “leave a little bit more time” if driving and to travel with “a bit of extra caution”. It comes after commuters faced travel chaos on Monday morning as large parts of the UK were hit by ice, fog and snow.
It was the coldest night of the year so far, with temperatures in northern Scotland dipping below minus 15C. The Met Office said the lowest temperature recorded was minus 15.6C at Braemer in Aberdeenshire, with the five next coldest temperatures all recorded in Scotland, including minus 13.1 at Balmoral.
Meanwhile, three boys aged eight, 10 and 11 died after falling into an icy lake in Solihull on Sunday afternoon. A fourth boy, six, remains in a critical condition in hospital.
Richard Stanton, area commander for West Midlands Fire and Rescue Service, said: “We know that the weather forecast for the next few days is expected to be bitterly cold. Please, adults and children alike, stay away from open water. Under no circumstances venture on to ice regardless how thick or safe you think this ice may be.”
Drivers on northern sections of the M25 were stranded for several hours as traffic was at a standstill. The UK’s busiest motorway was closed in both directions between Junction 23 for South Mimms and Junction 25 for Waltham Cross, in Hertfordshire, on Monday morning. National Highways said the closure was caused by “snow and jack-knifed lorries”.
Other roads in the area suffering long delays included the M11, M2, A21, A27 and A249. National Highways said it had up to 25 gritters treating the M25 at any one time on Sunday and overnight into Monday. They spread 960 tonnes of salt and more than 18,000 litres of anti-freeze.
Several railway lines will experience major disruption until the end of Monday, including services run by Gatwick Express, Great Northern, Southern and Thameslink. There are minor and severe delays to London Underground trains, with all but the Waterloo & City line, Elizabeth line, Bakerloo, Circle and DLR affected.
Parts of the London Overground are suspended, including between Watford to Euston, Surrey Quays to Clapham Junction and Sydenham to West Croydon. More than 300 flights due to serve UK airports were cancelled across Sunday and Monday, with Heathrow, Gatwick, Manchester, Stansted and Bristol among those affected.
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