Another record tumbled on Thursday when the UK recorded its eighth day at or above 34C in a calendar year, breaking the previous high of seven days set in the summer of 1976 and in 2020. The milestone came as officials warned that drought conditions are increasingly likely while the nation swelters in another lengthy heatwave — the third of the summer.
On Friday morning, Anglian Water announced a hosepipe ban for its more than five million customers in the East of England. Customers will not be allowed to use hosepipes for watering gardens, washing cars or filling swimming and paddling pools from 1am on Saturday, but the utility has asked that people “live within the spirit of these restrictions immediately”.
“Hosepipe bans expand to 5 million Anglian Water customers as UK records eighth day at 34C.”
Dr Geoff Darch, head of strategic asset planning for Anglian Water, said: “This year has been exceptionally hot and dry, and we’re already into the third heatwave of the summer. Every day of sustained hot weather increases the challenge of balancing supply and demand, and we are now at the point where we need to ask customers to help by hanging up the hosepipe, letting lawns go brown, cars go dirty and using water even more wisely to help protect the environment and ensure water remains available for all customers.”
Cambridge Water announced a temporary hosepipe ban for its 350,000 customers, marking the first time in three decades that it has introduced the restriction. In a notice on Thursday afternoon, the company said its teams are working around the clock to maintain supplies, but local water resources “are now under significant pressure” with demand reaching record levels after low levels of rainfall.
The new restrictions add to existing bans introduced earlier in July. South East Water banned hosepipe use on July 3 for areas of Kent, including Ashford, Canterbury, Faversham, Maidstone, Sevenoaks, Snodland, Tenterden and Tunbridge Wells. Hosepipe restrictions are also set to come into force for about one million Southern Water customers across Hampshire and the Isle of Wight on Friday.
UK officials recently warned that the risk of drought conditions in some parts of the country is becoming increasingly likely, with authorities keeping a close watch on East Anglia, Devon and Cornwall, and water companies scrambling to manage increasingly tight resources. The succession of unusually hot spells is causing growing impacts on health, agriculture, water resources, energy, wildfire and transport — and with the third heatwave showing no immediate sign of breaking, more restrictions may follow.