
Hurricane Erin has battered the Caribbean,and its after effects are heading towards the UK (Picture: NOAA/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock)
Powerful Hurricane Erin has brought storm surges and dangerous winds to the Caribbean and the US East Coast – but is it on course to hit the UK?
The powerful storm has since steered away from the US and has been downgraded to a category 3 storm,but could still upset the weather gods over here.
So as Brits pray for sunny weather over the bank holiday weekend,Metro explored whether the next week will bring clear skies or rainy downpours.
Hurricane Erin has weakened to a Category 3 stormHurricane Erin reached winds of 125mph on Sunday morning,according to the US National Hurricane Center (NHC).It has now been downgraded to a category 3 storm after hitting category 5 status last week.The devastating rain and winds left more than 147,000 people without power on Sunday in Puerto Rico,with more than 20 flights also cancelled.Residents of the Virgin Islands,Puerto Rico,Hispaniola,and the Turks and Caicos Islands are all expected to be affected as the storm rages on this week.
Pressure charts suggest mostly settled weather for the next week (Picture: BBC Weather)Central and southern England look set for the warmest temperatures between 23C and 25C,while other regions could see high teen and low 20s.These highs don’t appear hot enough to be defined as another heatwave,however.For that to happen,the heat need to exceed the heatwave temperature thresholds for three days in a row.These thresholds are 27C and 28C for most of south and south east England,but 25C and 26C for the remainder of England and the UK.The Met Office has already said summer 2025 could be the hottest on record after parts of the country hit 27C on Sunday.Met Office scientist,Emily Carlisle,said: ‘It’s looking like this summer is on track to be one of the warmest,if not ‘the’ warmest,since the series began in 1884.‘What’s striking is the consistency of the warmth. June and July were both well above average and even outside of heatwaves,temperatures have remained on the warmer side.’United News - unews.co.za