A lightning bolt is seen above building in Canary WharfImage source, Wapping Weather / Weather Watchers
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Ligntning flashes over Wapping in London in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

BySimon King , Lead Weather Presenter and Henry Moore

Thousands of lightning strikes lit up the sky overnight, as thunderstorms caused flash flooding and travel disruption across parts of England.

The storms rolled into the south west on Monday evening and moved towards the south east during the night, with people reporting being woken up in the early hours by loud crashes of thunder and flashes of lightning.

London Fire Brigade said it responded to 400 calls overnight, including two house fires believed to be caused by lightning strikes, while a house in Bristol was set ablaze during a storm earlier in the evening.

It comes as England braces for temperatures of up to 40C, with the Met Office issuing a rare red alert set to come into force on Wednesday.

Met Office data suggests there were 29,000 lightning strikes in a 24-hour period, with some very heavy rain in some areas leading to flash flooding.

The intense thunderstorms developed due to a couple of factors.

The first is that it was very warm if not hot across southern England on Monday afternoon and temperatures soared into the high 20s and low 30s.

This heat transfers into the atmosphere, giving it a lot of energy. That energy is then primed for a trigger to covert it into big cumulonimbus – thunder – clouds.

The trigger was an atmospheric disturbance higher in the atmosphere – which essentially allowed all that stored energy to be released, resulting in the intense thunderstorms.

Lightning lights up the night sky in Brasted, KentImage source, Gardener Patrick / Weather Watchers
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The storms travelled across the south of England from Monday evening into the early hours of Tuesday

Cars drive through a flooded road in Hammersmith, London. Image source, Marzy / Weather Watchers
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The overnight storm caused flash-flooding, such as here in Hammersmith, London

Lightning lights up the night sky in Chelsea, Greater LondonImage source, Leigh / Weather Watchers
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The London skyline was dominated by flashes of lightning in the early hours of Tuesday morning

A bolt of Lightning pictured over a line of trees in Hornchurch, Greater LondonImage source, Peter Barrett / Weather Watchers
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Lightning bolts lit up the night sky in Hornchurch, Greater London

Lightning lights up the sky in BristolImage source, Roger / Weather Watchers
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In Bristol, one home was set on fire during the storm

Lightning lights up the sky in BathImage source, PJE / Weather Watchers
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Lightning strikes near a row of houses in Bath, Somerset

Lightning lights up the sky in BathImage source, Josie / Weather Watchers
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Forks of lightning could be seen above Bath on Monday evening

Lightning lights up the sky in Waltham Cross, HertfordshireImage source, MagTel / Weather Watchers
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And in Waltham Cross, Hertfordshire

  • Lightning strikes over a dark London skyline at night, illuminating low storm clouds above silhouetted buildings including a tall glass skyscraper.
  • Photo showing the front bumper and bonnets of a line of fire engines, lined up inside a station. The one nearest to the camera has "Avon Fire and Rescue" in white writing on a red panel

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