in Braemar, Aberdeenshire, people are used to low temperatures but there is anxiety about the soaring costs of staying warm

On the first day of November in Braemar, Aberdeenshire, there is a bitter chill in the air and the temperature hovers around 6C. This is balmy autumn weather for the village, nestled at the foot of the Cairngorm mountains and holder of the unenviable title of Britain’s coldest place, having recorded record low temperatures of -27.2C twice in the past 40 years. Just last year, the village experienced Britain’s coldest night since 1995, when temperatures dropped to -23C in February.

Braemar’s temperatures are thought to reach such extremes because of its geography, with the encircling mountains essentially turning the village into a “bowl” in which cold air blows down from the mountaintops and becomes trapped. In the coming months, residents can expect temperatures in the -20s accompanied by heavy snowfall, ice and storms. But while people in Braemar are well prepared for the weather, little can shield them from energy prices surging here as across the country.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

You May Also Like

Home Office spent almost £9m on deportation charter flights in 2020

At least 828 people were removed on charter flights last year, more…

England to wear white in Euros final with Germany made to change kit

Germany to play in dark green at Wembley on Sunday FA says…

‘Half-baked, half-hearted’: critics ridicule UK’s long-awaited climate strategy

UK’s 1,000-page plan criticised as doing ‘little to boost energy security, lower…

Multiple civilian deaths linked to 2016-17 British airstrikes against IS in Mosul

Exclusive: Guardian investigation finds deaths despite claims British weapons did not harm…