The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for rain covering northern areas of England until 10 pm following the overnight flooding in London, causing significant closures on travel services.
Dozens of flood alerts are in place throughout the day at scattered locations across the UK after commuters captured images of London buses ploughing through floodwater and tube stations closing on Monday night.
Meteorologist Grahame Madge has said the North East could experience up to 50mm of rain throughout the day – even higher levels than those recorded in the South overnight.
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An HGV was captured making huge ripples through floodwater on the A4 between Hyde Park Corner Underground and Knightsbridge Underground stations in central London on Monday night.
Nearby St James’ Park was hit with 35mm of rainfall in just six hours after midnight, the Met Office has said. London mayor Sadiq Khan said the flooding had disrupted parts of the Tube network.
A spokesperson for Mr Khan said: “Flash flooding in some areas of London last night is causing concern and anxiety for many Londoners and it shows once again that the dangers of climate change have moved closer to home.
“It remains a key priority for the mayor and London’s council leaders that more is urgently done to tackle the risk of surface water flooding and the other impacts of the climate crisis.”
Mr Khan added on Twitter that Transport for London is, “working hard with local councils to open roads and return affected Tube and rail service to normal as quickly and safely as possible”.
He urged the Government to devolve more funding and powers to local leaders to help them deal with flooding, adding that Cop26 is an opportunity to show “global leadership” against climate change.
Storrington in West Sussex also experienced 30mm between midnight and 6 am, while Market Bosworth in Leicestershire had 29mm.
He said: “The rainfall is subsiding for much of the country now, but the low-pressure system is going out into north-east England and south-east Scotland.
“It will still be a bit showery elsewhere, but the main downpours are converging over the North East. The forecast for the next few days in England show high pressure moving in, leading to more settled weather,” he added.
Strong winds are also predicted to compound the rain on the east coast and western areas are likely to experience sunny spells with scattered showers.
The Environment Agency has issued 54 flood alerts for areas where flooding is possible, and four flood warnings across England.
Scattered locations in London, Birmingham and Cumbria are covered by the flood warnings, which mean disruption to homes, travel and power is likely.
The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) has issued flood alerts for Edinburgh and Lothians and the Scottish Borders, while Natural Resources Wales has one in place along the North Wales coast.