logo
ADVERTISEMENT

Homes flooded, weather warnings on New Year's Day

Greater Manchester Police said people became trapped in their homes without running water.

image
by BBC NEWS

World01 January 2025 - 18:00
ADVERTISEMENT

In Summary


  • Others were rescued from cars stranded in floodwaters.
  • Wednesday's flooding and disruption came after New Year's Eve events across the country were cancelled due to bad weather - although celebrations in Manchester and London went ahead.

SCREENSHOT/BBC

More than 100 flood warnings have been issued across the UK and a major incident declared in Greater Manchester as wind and rain hits parts of the country on the first day of 2025.

Greater Manchester Police said people became trapped in their homes without running water, while others were rescued from cars stranded in floodwaters.

Some weather warnings for wind and ice remain in place for parts of the UK - and forecaster say temperatures will plummet overnight, with snow due to roll in over the weekend.

Wednesday's flooding and disruption came after New Year's Eve events across the country were cancelled due to bad weather - although celebrations in Manchester and London went ahead.


Severe rainfall through the night resulted in flooding in a number of areas across Greater Manchester, the police force said.

Places affected include Bolton, Didsbury, South Manchester, Harpurhey, North Manchester, Stalybridge, Stockport and Wigan.

Flood waters in Stockport have trapped a number of people in their flats without electricity or running water.

Two separate rescues were carried out by authorities overnight in Warrington and nearby Lymm after people became trapped in their vehicles in floodwater.

The Environment Agency (EA) has issued 109 flood warnings in England, mostly concentrated in the North West.

There are also 11 flood warnings in place for north Wales and 17 warnings in place for Scotland.


The Met Office weather warnings in place across the UK include:


  • A yellow warning for snow and ice for northern Scotland until 15:00
  • A yellow warning for ice for the rest of Scotland, Northern Ireland and much of England and Wales throughout this evening and into Thursday morning
  • A yellow warning of wind is in place across southern England and Wales until 15:00


Previous rain warnings covering parts of the UK, including for rain in north west England, have now been lifted.


In the Highlands, forecasters warned "blizzard conditions are possible", especially in the far northern regions of Sutherland and Caithness.


London's New Year's Day parade suffered a short delay due to the high winds in the capital.


The parade was delayed by 30 minutes to avoid coinciding with a squall line - a narrow band of extremely high wind - that was expected in London around midday.

Organisers said inflatable cartoon characters due to feature in the parade would not be used after advice from the Met Office.

Snow forecast for the weekend

Around 90mm of rain has fallen widely across north west England over the last 24 hours with over 100mm recorded on some hills in north Wales and Cumbria.

There are lane closures on several motorways and roads of north west England.

Rain and strong winds will continue to affect parts of southern England and East Anglia, but the weather will become drier and brighter across Wales, the Midlands and north England with the strong winds easing.

A weather front over Scotland is bringing rain with some sleet and snow over hills. It will bring much colder arctic air as it move southwards, with sunny spells and snow showers following.

A few centimetres of snow is expected at low elevations overnight, but the hills of north Scotland are likely to see 5-10cm of snow in places bringing some local disruption.

It will feel increasingly bitter as arctic air reaches all areas by Thursday.

Over the weekend, there is a yellow snow warning in place for the vast majority of the UK, stretching from southern Scotland, across north England, the Midlands, Wales, over London and across much of the south east and west.

An area of low pressure will move into this cold air on Sunday bringing rain and some disruptive snow on its northern edge.

The poor weather conditions are causing rail disruptions in parts of the country and several rail operators have urged passengers to check online before travelling.

  • Heavy flooding has led to widespread cancellations across Northern Rail services on Wednesday, including to and from Manchester airport.

  • The TransPennine Express service urged customers not to travel at all on Wednesday due to heavy flooding on several routes.

  • Transport for Wales said the weather had caused a number of its lines to be blocked.

  • Northern Ireland's Translink similarly advised travellers to check routes before travelling.

Related Articles

ADVERTISEMENT

logo© The Star 2024. All rights reserved