Residents in parts of southeast England are being urged to use water only for “essential purposes” and several schools have been forced to close, as water supplies are squeezed in the hot weather.
The taps ran dry in Rotherfield primary school in Crowborough, East Sussex, at 1.15pm on Monday afternoon, and the school has remained closed since.
Headteacher Kate Bishop said only a little water was “dribbling through” the taps on Wednesday, when temperatures in the town were forecast to reach 27C.
“We cannot ensure the correct sanitation to keep the children safe,” she told Sky News.
“And in such hot weather, we’ve been given some bottled water, but it certainly wouldn’t be enough to keep about 213 children and about 40 staff hydrated for the day.”
Two other primary schools in the area were also closed on Wednesday, while sixth-formers at the town’s Beacon Academy were told to go to an alternative site because of the lack of water.
Image: Water demand in the southeast has shot up during the hot weather
South East Water, which supplies drinking water to 2.2 million people in the region, said demand for water in the heat had outstripped supply.
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It pumped enough extra water over the weekend to supply the equivalent of four towns the size of Eastbourne, and has now set up bottled water stations for residents in four areas.
The water company has asked customers in an area stretching from Haywards Heath to Canterbury Castle to use water for “essential purposes” only.
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Image: Water use guidance from South East Water
Daniela Schmidt, professor in palaeobiology at Bristol University, said increased water efficiency is “alien on these green and traditionally water rich islands”.
“But we need to increase supply and reduce demand to avoid larger risks.”
Increased reservoir storage, reusing water and changing the way we use land are vital to increasing resilience against droughts, she said.
Headteacher Ms Bishop added: “I’m concerned that we’ll get the children back for a week next week, and then if it gets hot again, what’s going to happen? We’re not prepared [for this]. And we’ve been given no guidance.”
South East Water’s incident manager Nick Bell said: “We are very sorry to all our customers who are currently without water or with low pressure.
“We know this is a difficult time for customers affected and among those are schools which have had to close.
“We are doing all we can to restore supplies, which is why we are asking our customers to use water for essential tasks only, such as cooking, cleaning and hygiene.”
It comes after a heatwave struck swathes of the UK from the northwest to the south east, with temperatures reaching 32.2C in Chertsey, Surrey, on Saturday – marking the hottest day of the year so far.
The hot weather is set to continue across much of England over the next few days, with temperatures forecast to hit 28C in London and 27C in Manchester.
NHS chiefs have warned the number of people seeking emergency help will rise as the hot weather continues across the UK.
Yesterday, the government’s environment adviser criticised weather forecasters for being happy about hot weather, as rivers in the typically wet northwest shrivelled.
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Guardsmen faint under blazing sun
How has climate change affected hot weather?
Climate change is making heatwaves hotter and last longer all around the world.
Dr Vikki Thompson, climate scientist at Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI), said all across Britain “extended periods of hot weather have doubled in length since the period 1961-1990”.
“Southeast England has seen the greatest changes – with a tripling of warm spells.”
Last year, a prolonged dry spell and record heat tipped swathes of England into drought, as parks turned yellow, reservoirs shrank and fish had to be rescued from shrivelled rivers.
Two Environment Agency areas – East Anglia, and Devon and Cornwall – remain in drought.
Watch The Climate Show with Tom Heap on Saturday and Sunday at 3pm and 7.30pm on Sky News, on the Sky News website and app, and on YouTube and Twitter.
The show investigates how global warming is changing our landscape and highlights solutions to the crisis.
“We have lost our beautiful daughter, sister, friend and mother. Annabel was a truly wonderful woman,” the tribute read.
“She touched the hearts of so many.
“She gave her life to helping the vulnerable and the disadvantaged whether it was in refugee camps in Africa or setting up MamaSuze in London, to enhance the lives of survivors of forced displacement and gender-based violence.”
When I got to Chequers on Sunday, the prime minister had clearly been up for most of the night and hitting the phones all morning with calls to fellow leaders in Europe and the Middle East, as he and others scrambled to try to contain a very dangerous situation.
His primary message was to try to reassure the public that the UK government was working to stabilise the region as best it could and press for a return to diplomacy.
But what struck me in our short interview was not what he did say but what he didn’t – what he couldn’t – say about the US strikes.
It was clear from his swerve on the question of whether the UK supported the strikes that the prime minister neither wanted to endorse US strikes nor overtly criticise President Donald Trump.
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Starmer reacts to US strikes on Iran
Instead, his was a form of words – repeated later in a joint statement of the E3 (the UK, Germany and France) – to acknowledge the US strikes and reiterate where they can agree: the need to prevent Iran having a nuclear weapon.
He also didn’t want to engage in the very obvious observation that President Trump simply isn’t listening to Sir Keir Starmer or other allies, who had been very publicly pressing for de-escalation all week, from the G7 summit in Canada to this weekend as European countries convened talks in Geneva with Iran.
Image: Donald Trump and Sir Keir Starmer at the G7 in Canada last week. Pic: Reuters
It was only five days ago that the prime minister told me he didn’t think a US attack was imminent, when I asked him what was going on following President Trump’s abrupt decision to quit the G7 early and convene his security council at the White House.
When I asked him if he felt foolish or frustrated that Trump had done that and didn’t seem to be listening, he told me it was a “fast moving situation” with a “huge amount of discussions in the days since the G7” and said he was intensely pressing his consistent position of de-escalation.
What else really could he say? He has calculated that criticising Trump goes against UK interests and has no other option but to press for a diplomatic solution and work with other leaders to achieve that aim.
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Before these strikes, Tehran was clear it would not enter negotiations until Israel stopped firing missiles into Iran – something Israel is still saying it is not prepared to do.
The US has been briefing that one of the reasons it took action was because it did not think the Iranians were taking the talks convened by the Europeans in Geneva seriously enough.
It is hard now to see how these strikes will not serve but to deepen the conflict in the Middle East and the mood in government is bleak.
Iran will probably conclude that continuing to strike only Israel in light of the US attacks – the first airstrikes ever by the US on Iran – is a response that will make the regime seem weak.
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But escalation could draw the UK into a wider conflict it does not want. If Iran struck US assets, it could trigger Article 5 of NATO (an attack on one is an attack on all) and draw the UK into military action.
If Iran chose to attack the US via proxies, then UK bases and assets could be under threat.
The prime minister was at pains to stress on Sunday that the UK had not been involved in these strikes.
Meanwhile, the UK-controlled airbase on Diego Garcia was not used to launch the US attacks.
There was no request to use the Diego Garcia base, the president moving unilaterally, underlining his disinterest in what the UK has to say.
The world is waiting nervously to see how Iran might respond, as the PM moves more military assets to the region while simultaneously hitting the phones.
The prime minister may be deeply opposed to this war, but stopping it is not in his gift.
Initially, only those with a body mass index of over 40 who have at least four other health problems linked to obesity will be eligible.
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Can you get pregnant when on weight loss drugs?
Some doctors have raised concerns about the additional workload this new programme will bring, while pharmacists fear it could lead to supply shortages.
Dr Claire Fuller from NHS England said: “We urgently need to address rising levels of obesity and prioritise support for those who are experiencing severe ill health – and greater access to weight loss drugs will make a significant difference to the lives of those people.”
She added: “While not everyone will be eligible for weight loss drugs, it’s important that anyone who is worried about the impact of their weight on their health discusses the range of NHS support available with their healthcare professional.”
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Weight loss drugs ‘changing way we see obesity’
The chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs welcomed NHS England’s decision to pursue a phased rollout, and said current workloads must be factored in to ensure the jabs can be prescribed safely.
Professor Kamila Hawthorne went on to say: “While weight loss medications have a lot of potential benefits for patients who are struggling to lose weight and who meet all the clinical criteria for a prescription, they mustn’t be seen as a ‘silver bullet’ to aid weight loss.
“We also need to see a focus on prevention, stopping people becoming overweight in the first place so they don’t require a medical intervention later.”
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‘How I tried to get weight loss drugs’
Her remarks were echoed by the National Pharmacy Association’s chairman Olivier Picard, who says “prescribing these medications alone misses the point”.
He argued that they need to be part of a comprehensive strategy that includes lifestyle coaching, exercise and nutritional guidance – but many GPs currently “lack the bandwidth” to provide this support.
“As a result, we could end up in a situation where patients are prescribed the medication, lose weight, and then experience rebound weight gain once the course ends – simply because the foundational lifestyle changes weren’t addressed,” Mr Picard added.
Estimates suggest about 29% of the adult population is obese.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting says the government “is determined to bring revolutionary modern treatments to everyone who needs them, not just those who can afford to pay”.