Fresh weather alerts issued after coldest night of winter

The mercury is reported to have fallen to minus 14C in Dalwhinnie overnight

Author: Kara ConwayPublished 17th Jan 2024
Last updated 17th Jan 2024

Fresh warnings have been issued for snow in the UK after temperatures dropped to the coldest of the winter so far.

According to provisional recordings by the Met Office, the mercury fell to minus 14C in Dalwhinnie in Scotland on Tuesday night, reportedly the lowest January temperature in Britain since 2019.

Forecasters had predicted some snow-covered parts of Scotland could reach minus 15C overnight, which would have been the coldest January night for 14 years, when minus 22.3C was recorded in 2010.

The Met Office has issued amber warnings for snow between 3pm on Wednesday and 6pm on Thursday in north-west Scotland and the Northern Isles, meaning road delays are likely and some vehicles could be stranded.

The forecaster said some areas could see an extra 15 to 20cm of snow, meaning power cuts are likely and more remote communities are at risk of being cut off.

More than 150 schools across Highland are shut while dozens are either closed or opening late in Aberdeenshire.

There have been staggered openings and early closures for some schools in Moray.

Elsewhere in Orkney and Shetland, all schools will remain shut for today.

Picture of Inverness this morning after heavy snowfall overnight.

It comes after the Met Office said more than 40cm of snow may fall on high ground in north-west Scotland by the end of Friday.

Tuesday night did mark the coldest night this winter so far, beating the minus 12.5C daily minimum temperature recorded at Altnaharra in Sutherland on 3 December.

Freezing temperatures and snow will continue for much of Britain this week because of cold Arctic air before "potentially disruptive" stormy weather lands over the weekend.

A "cold plunge of Arctic air" has moved south across the whole country over the past few days, making it 5C to 6C lower than usual for this time of year, the Met Office said.

A Met Office spokeswoman said the low temperatures are also due to how long the cold snap has lasted.

She said: "It's due to the prolonged nature of this cold spell, it will have been lasting for quite a few days.

"A build up of snow, as well, just allows for the temperatures to get colder and colder and we don't often see a cold spell last three to five days.

"The air is coming directly from the Arctic, so it is exceptionally cold air.

"It's staying cold until Friday, and then looking further ahead into the weekend we've got some deep areas of low pressure pushing in, so a big change in weather type, and we could see some stormy conditions by the end of the week.

"The cold isn't lasting right to end of the week, but we have a very different type of potentially-disruptive weather arriving."

The weather is forecast to turn stormy on Sunday, she added.

Yellow weather warnings for snow and ice remain in place across Scotland, much of northern England and parts of North Wales until Thursday, then more mild temperatures are forecast along with wind and rain.

Meanwhile, lower ground in north-west Scotland could see between five and 10cm of snow by the end of the working week.

The Met Office said on Tuesday: "There is a system skirting the south of the UK tonight and on Wednesday. This could bring a few snow flurries to the far south with a small chance of pushing slightly further north to bring more snow to southern counties."

It said it is reviewing the situation and any new warnings could be issued at short notice.

The weekend will be milder, but westerly weather will bring wind and rain - and the potential for more weather warnings as the snow melts.

National Rail warned the wintry weather could affect train journeys all week, with services between Edinburgh/ Glasgow Queen Street and Inverness running to an altered schedule on Wednesday.

ScotRail said a normal service is expected to run on Wednesday, bar a handful of changes on the Highland Mainline.

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