Three quarters of Britain’s rail firms are running slower trains today after tracks hit 62C (144F) – as Oxford Circus Tube station had to be shut after a ‘smoking escalator’ sparked an evacuation.
A total of 21 train operators announced slower services to stop tracks buckling – with Network Rail warning travellers that train times could more than double due to speed restrictions.
The London Fire Brigade said firefighters were investigating reports of smoke coming from an escalator machine room on the northbound Victoria Line. The incident is causing yet more disruption to the Tube network, which is already running a reduced service.
Meanwhile, Network Rail has issued a red ‘do not travel warning’ for services out of London, while hundreds of trains have been cancelled and other services subjected to reduced speeds after tracks buckled in the heat. The hottest railway track reached 62C (144F) yesterday at a spot in Suffolk, Network Rail said.
One father travelling from Paddington to Penzance with his wife and two young daughters told MailOnline: ‘I just got on the GWR to Penzance and the conductor informed us the speed is limited to 60mph due to heat restrictions on the track, so it’s going to be a long trip.’
Today, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps admitted the UK’s infrastructure ‘could not cope’ with the extreme weather – as the country braced for potential highs of 43C (109F) this afternoon.
A section of the A14 dual carriageway in Cambridgeshire was left looking like a ‘skatepark’ after it warped in the heatwave yesterday, police said. Meanwhile, a section of the A114 in Leytonstone, east London, had to be partially closed after the verge caught fire.
The RAC has warned motorists who may be driving to work that the number of vehicle breakdowns today could be a fifth higher than usual.
Road congestion in several cities was down on last week, TomTom figures showed, as people avoided travelling in the heat.
In Birmingham, congestion levels fell from 48 per cent on July 12 to 32 per cent, while in Manchester they decreased from 59 per cent to 44 per cent.
Runways at Luton Airport and RAF Brize Norton were impacted by the heat yesterday – forcing aircraft to divert.
London Fire Brigade said it was responding to reports of smoke coming from an escalator machine room on the northbound Victoria Line
Police officers and Transport for London staff manning a cordon outside Oxford Circus following today’s escalator fire
Boards at Kings Cross this morning, where were bemused as to why temperatures that were ‘quite normal’ elsewhere during summer had resulted in such disruption
Kings Cross resembled a rush hour ghost town this morning as all trains were cancelled today with rocketing temperatures causing havoc to the rail network. Meanwhile, Euston remained busy
The A14 melted during today’s heatwave at Bottisham in Cambridgeshire today. This photo was taken this morning
There were delays on the A114 Bush Road near the A106 / A12 Green Man junction today after the grass verge caught fire
Today, Network Rail released images of rails that had become bendy in the extreme heat. One rail reached 62C (144F) yesterday, it said
Network Rail advised no one to travel on services leaving north from London today after pictures emerged of rails that had buckled in the heat
Network rail is responsible for maintaining the country’s railway infrastructure, which has been badly affected by the heat
Britons have experienced the ‘warmest night on record’ with London reaching 29C (84F) by midnight, while the mercury in Southampton hit 24C (75F).
Meanwhile, in Dover in Kent, the mercury stayed a few degrees cooler and reached 21C (70F) in the early hours of the morning while Aboyne in Aberdeenshire hit 19C (66F).
Today, Mr Shapps conceded the UK’s transport network cannot cope with the extreme heat.
He told BBC Breakfast: ‘We’ve seen a considerable amount of travel disruption. We’re probably going to see the hottest day ever in the UK recorded today, and infrastructure, much of it built in Victorian times, just wasn’t built to withstand this type of temperature – and it will be many years before we can replace infrastructure with the kind of infrastructure that could, because the temperatures are so extreme.’
Asked if the transport system can cope with the weather, he said: ‘The simple answer at the moment is no.
‘Where those tracks are 40 degrees in the air, on the ground that could be 50, 60, 70 and more, so you get a severe danger of tracks buckling. What we can’t have is trains running over those and a terrible derailing.
‘We’ve got to be very cautious and conscious of that, which is why there’s reduced speeds on large parts of the network.’
Council gritters have been put on standby to spread light dustings of sand on melting roads.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said issues on the rails and roads will continue for decades during extreme heatwaves.
Asked how long it will take to upgrade existing rail infrastructure to be more resilient, he told Sky News: ‘Decades, actually, to replace it all. Ditto with Tarmac on the roads.
‘There’s a long process of replacing it and upgrading it to withstand temperatures, either very hot or sometimes much colder than we’ve been used to, and these are the impacts of global warming.’
He said there was no Cobra meeting planned for today, with the Prime Minister instead chairing Cabinet.
Kings Cross resembled a rush hour ghost town today as all trains were cancelled with rocketing temperatures causing havoc to the rail network.
All services between London and York were called off as the 40c temperatures hit with rail bosses concerned that tracks would not handle the heat.
The only busy spot was the fictional ‘Platform 9 3/4’ from the Harry Potter films.
At the head of the queue were New Yorkers Stacey and Steven Koppell and their nine-month-old daughter Hannah.
The couple said they we are flabbergasted that Britain could come to a standstill among what they described as ‘very normal to us’ temperatures.
They endured a nightmare train journey yesterday which led to them forking out £215 for a taxi.
Commuters on the sweltering Jubilee line this morning as they commute to work on the London Underground
Railway companies have issued similar warnings to Network Rail, with Thameslink telling customers ‘please do not travel’
Northern said many routes had ‘completely shut down’, while Chiltern Railways also had a ‘do not travel’ notice in place
LNER said no trains would be running between Kings Cross and south of York and Leeds, while the Gatwick Express has been suspended
There were delays and overcrowding on the Jubilee Line this morning due to speed restrictions because of hot weather
A man sleeping at London Bridge Station today as the Met Office warned temperatures could climb to 40C (104F) today, smashing the UK’s all-time record
Trains in sidings at Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, as many services are cancelled amid mass rail disruption
Mr Koppell, a Manhattan lawyer, said: ‘We are going to the Cotswolds for the day by train and the return journey stopped at Oxford and they said they couldn’t take us any further.
‘Our hotel is in Paddington and we’ve got a young baby daughter and we have no alternative but to spend £215 on a taxi.
‘I do think it is a bit much. Britain just isn’t ready for these temperatures. But it is 2022! ‘
Mrs Koppell, a New York teacher, added: ‘This these summer temperatures are quite normal to us.
‘We were expecting a couple of days of rain before we move onto France and I think these temperatures have caught the country by surprise.
‘It’s just haven’t been prepared. We’ve heard about Trainline spending in the heat on the tarmac at airports Milton. It isn’t really anybody’s fault. But we are bemused by it all.’
Another American, Maria Schroeder, and two friends were left frustrated after their train to Edinburgh was cancelled.
Maria, 23, a teacher from Ohio, said: ‘We got here at 4:45 am for our train which was supposed to leave an hour later only to find it cancelled.
‘My friends Ellie and Kyle and I were only fitting in Edinburgh for 24 hours to see that beautiful city.
‘We’re only here for a short vacation so we’ll have to cancel it now and we’ve also lost our Airbnb which we booked in Scotland.
‘We’ve had to find alternative accommodation for tonight in Camden Town, and we can’t book in till 2 pm. So we are stuck here with our luggage.
‘I am just bemused at how England has come to a standstill. The heat index back home was in the 90s and yet everything works as normal.’
Rachel Ayers, a Met Office forecaster, said: ‘There are likely to be delays on roads, with road closures, as well as possible delays and cancellations to trains and maybe issues with air travel.
‘This could pose a significant health risk to those stuck on services or roads during the heat.’
A Tube driver sipping from a bottle of water at Kings Cross, where all overground trains were cancelled this morning due to the heat
People are being warned to stay at home instead of travelling. Pictured: Queues to board trains on the Jubilee Line today
Transport for London (TfL) said London’s rail network would also be running a reduced service today due to safety restrictions put into place to deal with the heat. Pictured: Commuters on the Jubilee Line