towards the west. it will be a muggy start to the day, temperatures 14, 15, 17 degrees first thing tomorrow in london but let s pick up on those showers. the south west of england, wales, through the midlands, there could be a few more reaching the south coast tomorrow, but again, many of us will miss them. of course, what we don t want is an awful lot of rain in a short space of time because that causes flash flooding and i guess there is a possibility of that in some areas tomorrow, but the vast majority of us missing the heaviest of the rain. tomorrow, very modest temperatures, 22 in london, a mere 15 in aberdeen, a cold 12 for our friends 22 in london, a mere 15 in aberdeen, a cold 12 for ourfriends in lerwick. there is a change on the way some good news if you want some rain. a low pressure is approaching on saturday. but at the same this vortex of wind, this low pressure by its virtue is also going to scoop up warmer airfrom the its virtue is also going to scoop up warm
on his mobility scooter police arrest a man on suspicion of murder. it is not clear what they are trying to target. moments later, it s clear we are the target. explosions. a special report from the front line in ukraine on the troops using drones to attack russian positions. and she s back another big win for emma raducanu as she prepares to defend her us open title. and coming up on the bbc news channel, we ll have the latest from lord s as england take on south africa in the first test of the series. good afternoon. hundreds of thousands of pupils in england, wales and northern ireland have been getting their a levels and btec results today the first group of students to sit formal exams since the pandemic. the proportion getting top grades has fallen from last year though it s higher than 2019, the last time there were exams. the drop in the highest grades is likely to mean tougher competition for first choice places at university. the first new technical or t lev
global temperatures mean a higher likelihood of heatwaves and more heatwaves and longer heatwaves. until we stop adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, scientists say the world is going to keep getting hotter. jonah fisher, bbc news. 0ur correspondent guy hedgecoe is in the spanish capital, madrid. give us a sense of what it is like there right now, guy? give us a sense of what it is like there right now, guy? well, where i am riaht there right now, guy? well, where i am right now there right now, guy? well, where i am right nowjust there right now, guy? well, where i am right nowjust outside am right nowjust outside the capital it is in the low 30s celsius at the moment, the temperature is going to keep increasing here up to around a0 degrees. it is getting rather uncomfortable now but it is going to get much more uncomfortable. down in the south of the country in some areas of andalusia which are on red alert, they are going to see temperatures up they are going to see tempe
of last week spain in saragossa saw heavy rain and hail through the streets, and it all follows what the wmo have said was the warmest week ever recorded. a warm atmosphere means more extreme rainfall and the impact of climate change will be assessed, but there have been other things happening in vermont and the other north east parts of the us and the rain has been stuck in place by this area of high pressure in the north atlantic. we are on the other side with low pressure, not quite as extreme, but showing you for the rest of the week into the weekend it will be another changeable spell, rather cool for the time of year and rain on and off and some heavy rain expected and strong winds on friday. that s coming our way. let s get back to what is happening at the moment. heavy showers at the moment and many are england and wales have faded and more will continue through scotland and northern ireland and with clear skies around a fresher night than we saw through last night. through tom
/PRNewswire/ We are delighted to announce Paul McGuire as Non-Executive Director at Saragossa. Saragossa Co-Founder Jimmy Lloyd: "We re delighted to welcome.