The Minister of Energy Ed Miliband said that Great Britain’s lifestyle was “threatened” by climate change, since the MET office said that extremes of heat and precipitation became the norm.
The youngest state of the British climate report, which was published in the International Journal of Climatology of the Royal Meteorological Society, shows the effects of global warming of man on the British weather, the sea, people and the wildlife.
From previous spring events in nature to warm periods in 2024, which have already been beaten again this year, Met Office Experts say that the Great Britain climate varies from a few decades ago.
The report describes the climate in 2024 and long -term and shows how Great Britain has heated up at a speed of around 0.25 ° C per decade and is now about 1.24 ° C warmer than from 1961 to 1990.
For the first time, the report also found that the British sea level rose faster than the global average.
The Minister of Energy described the results “a strong warning” to take measures against the climate and nature.
“Our British way of life is threatened,” Miliband told the PA news agency.
“Whether it’s extreme heat, droughts, floods, we can actually see it with our own eyes that it already happened and we have to act.
“That is why the government has a central mission to make Great Britain a superiority of the clean energy and to tackle the climate crisis.”
For those who oppose the Green Politics of Labor, he said: “(U) Nless, we are acting on the cause of the event, the cause of what is changing our climate, and then we will reveal future generations.”
During a visit to a project, he spoke to a project before the report was published that restored a rare alkal window in Hinksey Heights, Oxfordshire.
Conservationists told the ministers how the fen, which is part of the national efforts to expand the best freshwater habitats in the country, help to promote the biological diversity of the wetlands and to lower the planetary heating carbon in the atmosphere.
In response to the report, Mr. Reed told PA that “the harmful effects of climate change on people who live in this country are absolutely baked”.
But he said that through projects like The Fen “we tackle the problem of nature loss and at the same time tackle the problem of climate change”.
A year later, Labor was heavily criticized in terms of her environmental approach, including the concerns about the planning reforms that cancel nature in the persecution of growth.
The environmental secretary defended the government’s measures and pointed out to increase the financing for sustainable agriculture and to develop the nature restoration fund so that money from house buildings flows into the more effective projects to the scale of landscape.
“We became one of the most called countries on the world,” he said. “This government calls time for this decline.”
The report states in the report that the last three years for Great Britain have been among the five most important.
Last year, the fourth most warmest records from 1884, while the year was the warmest May and the warmest spring – was already beaten until 2025 records.
But Mike Kendon, climate scientist and leading author of the report by Met Office, said: “It is the extreme of the temperature and precipitation that change the most, and that is profound, and this will continue in the future.”
According to the new analysis in the report, the hottest summer days have heated up about twice as much on the average summer days in the past ten years in some parts of Great Britain.
And when the United Kingdom’s climate warms up, it will also be wetter, with extreme rainfall, floods and storms in 2024, as in previous years.
England and Wales had the moist winter from October 2023 to March 2024 in more than 250 years, as floods on the derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, the West Midlands and Eastern Schotland.
While in January ISHA’s red warnings were issued for Storm Isha and Storm Darragh did not interpret in December that the United Kingdom will not become stormy or more winding.
Overall, however, the country’s weather changes, as increasing greenhouse gases increase the global temperature, said Kendon, whereby the recordings are “very common”.
“Every year there is another upward step on the warming on the way that our climate is,” he said.
“Observations show that our climate in Great Britain is now particularly different than a few decades ago.”
The report also states that Tide Gauge Records has accelerated the sea level in Great Britain since the 1900s increase in the 1900s, and two thirds of the increase of this time have taken place in the past three decades.
Dr. Svetlana Jevrejeva from the National Oceanography Center said that the Great Britain coast would see more events in which rising sea levels would be combined that would lead to a coastal flooding with high tides, even without storms.
“This additional increase in the sea level leads to an increase in the frequency of the extreme sea level and an intensification of the coastal risks,” she said.
In order to emphasize the effects of the British warming climate on the wildlife, the report on Nature’s Calendar, a voluntary database on the natural signs of the changing seasons, which was managed by the Woodland Trust.
The records for 2024 show that spring was earlier than average for 12 of the 13 monitored spring events, and the earliest in the data that appeared for Frogspawn in 1999 and nest Blackbirds.
The period of the year, in which leaves were on trees from spring to autumn, was also longer than the average, mainly due to the earlier spring in 2024.
The managing director of the Royal Meteorological Society, Professor Liz Bentley, said the report has strengthened the “clear and urgent signals of our changing climate”.