Forecasting confidence is at your fingertips ...

long-range weather outlook for Autumn and Winter, 2010 / 2011

Bridging the gaps in confidence between long-range weather and climate science  What are the average daily temperatures for Manchester, England

Aber | Belf | Birm | Bris | Card | Durh | Edin | Exet | Glas |

  MANCHESTER, ENGLAND (average values)
 
  Date Today Next week
   
     
  Maximum(oC)
  (oF)
  Minimum(oC)
  (oF)
Leed | Lond | Manc | Newc | Norw | Nott | Pemb | Shef | Sout | Tenb |

Download our UK Temperature Calculator - Calculate Heating Energy Demand for Household or Business (<100 KB .xls file)

Click your four letter abbreviation to view the 1961 - 1990 averages. You may need to hit the F5 (refresh) key to display the temperatures. Temperatures are reported within a precision of +/- 0.5°C (0.9°F), using data from the UK National Weather Service. They and are based on the current time on your computer's clock and were developed from interpolation of monthly location data. The urban heat island effect and local micro-climates may mean that your location was either slightly warmer or cooler "on average" during the 1961 - 1990 record period.

Click here to view the heating degree day (HDD) data for Manchester, England. Please view the heating degree day pages on the WeatherMedia Wiki for further details

Bridging the gaps in confidence between long-range weather and climate science  Green policy

Weather Logistics UK undertakes all its calculations on a dual processor desktop machine. It vastly conserves its own energy by reporting regional data rather than producing high resolution data. There are no in-house supercomputers eating away at the national grid here. In fact our average temperature calculator provides daily average temperatures for many town and cities in the UK. It uses a very simple "non-linear" calculation and consumes only a tiny bit of your own computer's processing power.

Bridging the gaps in confidence between long-range weather and climate science  Latest WebLog post ...
November 30, 2011
Winter Wonderland … Seasonal Prediction for the UK & Ireland

As November draws to a close, the weather pattern is beginning to show signs of a major change. A strong cold temperature anomaly in the mid-Atlantic is building as our polar jet stream is being flung northward along the southwest of Greenland. Intense storms and flooding have affected many parts of northern England and Scotland, [...]

Read more...