Environmental (Commonwealth Union)_ Britain is baking through a summer that’s starting to feel less like a season and more like a way of life. The numbers tell a disturbing story: from June until mid-August, the UK’s mean temperature hovered 1.6°C above the long-term average, at 16.2°C. But it’s the character of the heat that’s most revealing—not wishlist-topping highs, but an unrelenting, day-and-night heat that’s altering what it’s like to experience a British summer.
The issue is not the show of isolated heatwaves, states the Met Office, but the slow burn of climatic trends converging. A stationary high-pressure system has settled over the islands like an uninvited guest, but it is also working in collusion with accomplices: parched soils from a dry spring that cannot deliver their usual evaporative cooling, and most visibly a marine heatwave around the coastlines, turning the surrounding oceans into warm baths that release heat back into the air both day and night.
“It’s the consistency that’s impressive,” Met Office scientist Emily Carlisle concurs. “For not having dramatic highs, the unbroken warmth is what’s placing this summer in the top running since records began.” While the current record high temperature registered 35.8°C in Faversham does not quite reach the UK’s all-time record, it’s the high minimum temperatures that are equating to high discomfort and low recovery. Nights are not cooling, which turns bedrooms into airless chambers and sleep into a precious commodity.
The broader context is even more instructive. The UK is warming by about 0.25°C per decade, a trend that has made 2023, 2022, and 2018 all feature in the top ten warmest summers on record since 1884. This summer is on track to join or even lead that list, a situation that emphasizes how rapidly “extreme” is being repackaged as “normal.”
What’s so sinister about this heat is its origin. Instead of short, sharp heatwaves driven by continental air masses, this summer’s heat is homemade, intensified by regional factors like the warmed-up oceans and dried-out landscape. It’s a British-made feedback loop: warm water and dry land give rise to warmer air, which in turn reinforces the high pressure, creating a dome under which heat accumulates and stagnates.
As these final weeks of summer play out, the question is no longer whether this season will be record-breaking, but what it means for the years to come. When four heatwaves can pass without breaking temperature records and still create one of the hottest summers on record, it’s a reflection that the baseline itself is shifting. Britain’s climate is being rewritten not in dramatic disasters, but in subtle, steady, and stubborn degrees.