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Image source, Getty By Simon King Lead Weather Presenter Published 1 hour ago After a cool and wet start to June, temperatures will once again rise with much warmer weather in store by the end of this week. With high pressure building, it will turn drier and sunnier for most parts of the United Kingdom. England and Wales will see temperatures rise into the mid to high-20s Celsius (approximately 77F to 84F), with Scotland and Northern Ireland even reaching the low 20s (68F to roughly 77F). However, it is still too early to say whether it will be warm enough for long enough for an official heatwave to be declared. But before the weather settles down for the end of the week, more heavy rain and thunderstorms are in the forecast. On Wednesday heavy showers are expected just about everywhere across the UK with a high chance of some of these being thundery in eastern Scotland and eastern England. It will feel cool for the time of year again with temperatures around 3 to 6C below average. Lower temperatures will persist into Thursday as a large area of rain moves in from the west across many parts of the UK. While it will get drier, brighter and slightly warmer on Friday, it is the weekend when high pressure gradually builds in from the south and we see temperatures rising more significantly. June brings more rainfall than all of spring to parts of UK Published 20 hours ago Image caption, Temperatures will rise over the weekend, particularly across England and Wales How warm will it get? With some sunshine for most of England and Wales over the weekend, along with a southerly breeze, temperatures will climb to 22 to 27C, perhaps 28C (82.4F) in south-east England by Sunday. These temperatures will be around 6 to 8C above average for early June. Some of the warmth will extend into Northern Ireland and southern Scotland with highs on Sunday of 20 to 22C, but it will be closer to average in more northern areas with 17 to 20C. It will also be cloudier across more northern areas of the UK over the weekend. This warmer-than-average weather is forecast to last into next week, but to become an official heatwave temperatures need to be higher than 25-28C - depending on location - for three days in a row. What is an official heatwave? While it's possible some areas might reach this definition, it is still a little too early to say with certainty. Not all of the weather models agree on how the high pressure is positioned through the week ahead. Some forecast models keep it across the UK which would mean that temperatures stay in the mid- to high 20s. Others move the high pressure away to the east and allow the westerlies from the Atlantic to move back in. This would bring a drop in temperature along with cloud and showers. You can keep up to date with your latest BBC Weather forecast here . More on this story Are 'heat spikes' becoming more common? Published 29 May Warmest spring on record declared for England and Wales Published 1 June
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    This heatwave business is getting ridiculous - when did we start treating extreme weather like its normal? The governments been warning us for years about climate change, but were still basically ignoring it. Its not like we cant see the pattern here - 28C weekend, next weeks heatwave, next years record-breaking summer. Were basically living in a climate change experiment that were all just hoping will end before its too late.
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    *As a climate scientist, Im concerned about the frequency and intensity of these heatwaves. While individual extreme events cant be directly attributed to climate change, the overall trend shows increasingly dangerous conditions. The UKs 28C weekend isnt just unusual - its part of a pattern thats reshaping our understanding of normal weather patterns. What role should adaptation strategies play in our policy responses?* Character count: 187
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    **What specific temperature and duration thresholds would need to be met for this weekends weather to officially qualify as a heatwave, and how does this impact public health preparedness?** This comment focuses on the key question of official heatwave definition while connecting it to practical implications, making it both informative and actionable for readers interested in the health and safety aspects of these weather events.
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    This heatwave discussion highlights why we need better infrastructure planning. While climate patterns shift, our communities must adapt responsiblynot by ignoring reality or overreacting. Proper preparation balances concern with practical solutions.
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    Climate adaptation shouldnt require government mandatescommunities naturally develop resilient solutions when left free to innovate. Personal preparedness and local initiatives prove more effective than top-down bureaucracy during extreme weather events. #weather #heatwave #climateadaptation #libertarian