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Storm Conall: Met Office issues weather warning as new storm set to bring 14 hours of torrential rain

The Met Office has issued weather warnings as the Dutch weather service has named Storm Conall while Brits continue to reel from flooding brought by Storm Bert.
Storm Conall: Met Office issues weather warning as new storm set to bring 14 hours of torrential rain

The Met Office has issued weather warnings as the Dutch weather service has named Storm Conall while Brits continue to reel from flooding brought by Storm Bert.

The Met Office said the storm will hit southern England tonight, bringing with it heavy rain. Storm Conall will then move over to the Netherlands and is is expected to have a more severe impact on the country on Wednesday and Thursday.

Forecasters said Kent, the Isle of Wight and Sussex could be blighted the most by rain and the Met Office has put in a yellow warning from 10pm to 12pm tomorrow. The rain warning covers parts of the South West, particularly around Plymouth, and the south coast and up into south east London and coastal Essex.

The weather warnings said bus and train services would “probably” be affected with delays expected. Flooding on the roads and a few homes is also “likely.”

Forecasters said as much as 40mm of rain could fall in some areas, although there is a “lower chance” of 50mm falling in some areas. It comes just days after Storm Bert left hundreds of homes flooded, turned roads into rivers and saw winds of more than 80mph.

The latest storm, called Conall, is the third of the season and was named by the Dutch Weather Service, which along with the Met Office and Met Eireann in Ireland name storms so that the communication of severe weather is easier.

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There were more than 90 flood warnings and more than 120 flood alerts still issued across the UK on Tuesday evening.
A severe flood warning, meaning there is danger to life, was still in place in Billing Aquadrome holiday park and the surrounding parks next to the River Nene in Northampton.

Into tomorrow, the Met Office said conditions would vary across the country. The Met Office said in its Wednesday forecast: “Staying cloudy across England and Wales, with outbreaks of rain becoming more confined to eastern England through the day. Drier in Scotland and Northern Ireland with bright spells. Chilly.”

In its outlook through into Sunday, the Met Office added: “Cold on Thursday, with fog in the east. Rain arriving in the west later. Winds strengthening from Friday, with outbreaks of rain in the west. Turning milder into the weekend.”

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