BUDGET supermarket Aldi placed a limit on bottled water in one store earlier today.

Shoppers spotted Aldi placing limits of up to five bottles of water per customer in a London branch.

Supermarkets will now limit how many bottles of water customers can buy.

1

Supermarkets will now limit how many bottles of water customers can buy.Credit: LNP

The sign, which was temporarily displayed in a store, read: “Due to high demand at hot weather. Single water bottles limited five items per customer.”

“Limits are necessary for supporting you and your neighbours to find the products you need.”

Supermarkets are able to introduce limits on items in stores at the mangers discretion.

These limits are usually introduced by individual stores as a result of high demand.

Customers shouldn’t panic. The firm has confirmed that it hasn’t set any national limits on the sale of bottled water.

Shops will have anticipated that there will increased demand for certain products during the heatwave and will have well-stocked shelves

Last month when sweltering temperatures last hit the UK, the budget supermarket also placed limits on bottled water.

Aldi's Pizza Oven has 50% off and is perfect for the heatwave
The best garden furniture sales - up to £165 off including Asda, Aldi and B&M

Asda and Sainsbury’s have both confirmed they have no limits on the number of bottles people can buy.

We’ve contacted the other supermarkets and will update this story once we hear back.

A drought was declared in eight areas of England.

Parts of the South West, parts of southern and central England, and the East of England are now suffering drought status according to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said.

At a meeting of the National Drought Group, the government’s Environment Agency said the “drought trigger threshold had been met” in parts of southwestern, southern, central and eastern England.

Drought was last officially declared in England in 2018.

Temperatures are set to soar as high as 35C in some areas, making Britain hotter than the Bahamas, Jamaica and Barbados.

The Environment Agency on Friday published a report saying that England as a whole had its driest July since 1935.

Petrol prices fall BELOW 175p a litre - knocking £9 off a tank
I'm a legal expert - the exact temperature you could be sent home in a heatwave

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Mastercard to raise fees to EU firms by 500% for online sales to UK shoppers

Change from October could lead to higher prices for those paying with…

50 ways Britain has changed since Decimalisation Day 1971

Fifty years ago, Britain’s currency changed overnight. On February 14, 1971 there…

Royal Mail website goes down leaving hundreds of customers unable to log in or track parcels

HUNDREDS of Royal Mail customers are unable to log in or track…

Find out if YOUR bank is going to boost rates after latest BofE hike

Savers with money in easy-access accounts run by the High Street banks…