how we take the observations from a network of 2000 rain gauges across the uk, we interpolate the data into a gridded data set and we make this map of rainfall on the 3rd of october for example, the wettest day on record with 30.1 millimetres. that statistic is basically an average across the uk but when we do the maths on that, 30.1 millimetres comes up as 7.6 cubic kilometres, approximately enough rain to fill loch ness so quite a remarkable amount! once we had the system for knowing how much rain falls across the uk talk me about this one which goes back 180 years and how has rainfall changed in the uk over time? this is a uk national rainfall series and there is natural
at specific sites and interpret that to say the instance back in the 3rd of october 2020 it was the wettest day on record in the uk? we monitor carefully, how we take the observations from a network of 2000 rain gauges across the uk, we interpolate the data into a gridded data set and we make this map of rainfall on the 3rd of october for example, the wettest day on record with 30.1 millimetres. that statistic is basically an average across the uk but when we do the maths on that, 30.1 millimetres comes up as 7.6 cubic kilometres, approximately enough rain to fill loch ness so quite a remarkable amount! once we had the system for knowing how much rain falls across the uk talk me about this one which goes back 180 years and how has rainfall changed in the uk over time?
across the uk, we interpolate the data into a gridded data set and we make this map of rainfall on the 3rd of october for example, the wettest day on record with 30.1 millimetres. that statistic is basically an average across the uk but when we do the maths on that, 30.1 millimetres comes up as 7.6 cubic kilometres, approximately enough rain to fill loch ness so quite a remarkable amount! once we had the system for knowing how much rain falls across the uk talk me about this one which goes back 180 years and how has rainfall changed in the uk over time? this is a uk national rainfall series and there is natural variability in the weather from one
a new approach that will cost the taxpayer significantly less than planned. the mini budget was delivered by the previous chancellor, kwasi kwarteng, on the 23rd of september. it started unravelling on the 3rd of october when the government backtracked on cutting the 45p rate of tax. then on friday the 14th of october, the previous chancellor was sacked and a pledge not to raise corporation tax, too. then today the income tax cuts stopped indefinitely two year promise on energy bills now and were guaranteed until april. what remains of the plans, the cut to national insurance and stamp duty. the most important objective for our country right now is stability. governments cannot eliminate volatility in markets, but they can play their part, and we will do so, because instability affects the prices of things in shops, the cost of mortgages, and the values of pensions. outside parliament, opposition