Settled snow has turned to treacherous ice and caused disruption on roads and railways across the country as forecasters warned of freezing temperatures.
The deep freeze has also seen hundreds of schools close, thousands left without power and flights delayed on Monday, including at Heathrow where passengers have complained of waiting hours for travel to be rescheduled.
(PA Graphics)
The Met Office has extended its yellow weather warnings for snow and ice to cover vast swathes of the country, including London and the South East, much of the Midlands, Northern Ireland and Wales, as well as the eastern coast of England and northern and western Scotland.
Forecasters warned that clear skies on Monday night could see temperatures drop as low as minus 15C (5F), potentially beating Sunday night’s low of minus 11.6C (11F) in Chillingham Barns, Northumberland.
Heavy snow still lying on the ground, particularly around the Hereford area, has disrupted services on West Midlands Railway and Great Western Railway, while London Northwestern Railway trains to Milton Keynes from London have been delayed or cancelled.
Emergency services warned motorists to drive with caution, even on motorways, with icy slush on the M40 between junctions two and three causing a van to flip over following a collision with two other cars.
South Central Ambulance Service tweeted: “Three vehicle RTC this morning on M40 J2-3 nbd with @tvprp @Bucksfire @HighwaysEngland 4 pts, fortunately all minor injuries tho 1 to hospital for further treatment. Road conditions icy; lots of slush in lane 4 at scene of collision. #SlowDown #DriveToTheConditions.”
Western Power Distribution said engineers worked through the night to restore power to 99,500 homes in the Midlands, South Wales and South West but 7,000 customers were still without electricity, 6,500 of them in the West Midlands.
SSE said they restored power to more than 50,000 customers on Sunday but 800 in Oxfordshire and parts of Wiltshire remained without power at 8am on Monday.
Birmingham City Council was forced to cancel all council-run school and related transport services on Monday, the authority said.
More than 200 schools were closed in Gloucestershire, more than 300 in Staffordshire and more than 100 in Shropshire.
In Wales, 71 schools were closed in Flintshire, 11 in Wrexham and 49 in Denbighshire.
(Nick Potts/PA)
Met Office meteorologist Alex Burkill told the Press Association: “It was chilly in Chillingham Barns, but it wasn’t the coldest night of 2017 – that was Saturday night when temperatures went down to minus 12.4C.
“We could well beat that tonight and could go as low as minus 12C and even minus 15C.”
Even former England striker Michael Owen was caught out by the weather on Sunday night, with snow-laden tree branches covering his Bentley.
He said: “Not ideal at 5.30am when you’ve got a train to catch! Thought I was clever sheltering my car from the snow!”
A Heathrow spokesman apologised for the continued disruption and said: “Flights at Heathrow are disrupted today due to crew and aircraft being out of position following yesterday’s weather.
“Before coming to the airport, passengers must check their flight status with their airline. If the status of your flight is cancelled, please do not travel to the airport, keep updated via the airline’s website.”
Pete Williams, the RAC’s road safety spokesman, said they were expecting 11,000 breakdowns on Monday, a figure which is 20% above the seasonal norm.
More than a foot of snow fell in Sennybridge in Wales which saw 32cm (12.5 inches) on Sunday.