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The East and West Midlands are officially in drought after the driest start to a year since 1976.
The two regions join the North West of England and Yorkshire, which have had drought status for several weeks. The decision by the government's National Drought Group makes it more likely that people in the areas will be affected by hosepipe bans.
Check the latest weather forecast here Currently, eight million people have restrictions on water use, or will do so in the next week. Experts from the government, water companies and the Met Office judged that reservoir and river levels in the Midlands were well below normal, with no substantial rain in the forecast.
Nationally, reservoirs are on average just 76% full, below the level of the severe drought in 2022. But Howden reservoir in Derbyshire is just 39% full, with three heatwaves so far this summer rapidly draining supplies.
After the meeting by the government group, water minister Emma Hardy MP said: "We need to stop talking about these being extreme weather events and start to accept that because of climate change, things like this are going to be more normal. "So as for whether more companies will introduce temporary use bans, that really genuinely depends on what happens with the weather over the next few months." Read more: Extreme weather 'becoming the norm' - as minister warns UK's way of life 'under threat' The Environment Agency has drawn up a reasonable worst-case scenario in which England receives 20% less rain than normal and the weather remains warm, but not hot - far from improbable.
In that case, the drought will grow to include all regions down to Wessex, Hampshire and across to Cambridgeshire by the autumn. The rest of the country would be in a pre-drought status - officially called "prolonged dry weather" - apart from Devon and Cornwall, which have had more rain over recent months.
But a water expert has told Sky News that poor planning by the government and water companies is also to blame for regions being affected by drought and hosepipe bans. Professor Richard Ashley, of the University of Sheffield, said a failure to build new reservoirs, link up water grids across regions and fix leaks has undermined water security in the face of dry weather.
"We do have a largely Victorian-based supply system," he said. "A lot of our infrastructure is in desperate need of upgrading, and replacement of water mains is of the order of once every hundred years in this country, and that frankly is shocking.
"This is outdated thinking and outdated infrastructure to cope with problems of the now and the future." Read more from Sky News:Men who cut down iconic tree are locked upTerror arrests after van driven into defence factory's fence The last reservoir built in the UK was in 1992. Since then, the population has grown by 12 million.
And water companies currently lose three billion litres of water a day through leaks. Even on the day that the official drought was expanded, a burst water main in south London resulted in a flood that closed schools and forced homes to be evacuated.