near
Leatherhead in
Surrey, July 2022. July 2022 was the driest July in
England since 1935. According to
Sky News, in one in seven
counties, it was the driest July since records began in 1836. As a result,
hosepipe bans were introduced in some parts of
South East England. Fields and heathland dried up. On 12 August, a hosepipe ban came into force by
South East Water. Drought-like conditions also affected
South West England. On 12 August, a drought was declared in eight of the 14
Environment Agency areas:
Devon and
Cornwall, Solent and South Downs,
Kent and
South London,
Herts and
North London,
East Anglia, Thames,
Lincolnshire and
Northamptonshire, and the
East Midlands. Electricity supplies are reportedly threatened. Reservoir levels are at a 25-year low. A drought was declared in the
West Midlands region on 23 August, with the Environment Agency warning it had been using groundwater resources and reserves from reservoirs in Wales to help maintain the flows of the
River Severn, which supplies six million people in the area. On 15 August, a hosepipe ban was introduced in
Cornwall for the first time in 26 years. On 18 August, a hosepipe ban in
South West Wales was introduced affecting
Pembrokeshire and parts of
Carmarthenshire.
Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water said that it would be likely to last into September. Hosepipe bans were also declared by
Thames Water. On 19 August, a drought was declared in north
Ceredigion,
Teifi,
Pembrokeshire,
Carmarthen,
Swansea,
Llanelli,
Neath Port Talbot and
Bridgend. The
River Black Bourn in
Suffolk was reportedly "near dead". On 30 August, a drought was declared in
South West England, covering
Bristol,
Somerset,
South Gloucestershire,
Dorset and parts of
Wiltshire. Parts of Yorkshire experienced their driest period on record and emergency pipes were laid. In December 2022,
Yorkshire Water lifted the hosepipe ban after three months. The Cornwall hosepipe ban continued to be active into 2023, and was extended to cover large parts of
Devon on 25 April 2023. This was done in an attempt to replenish water levels at the
Roadford Reservoir ahead of that year's summer. ==See also==