Thousands of people have been evacuated from their homes
A tidal surge has hit coastal towns on the east of Britain after thousands of people were evacuated from their homes.
The North Sea surge, predicted to be the worst for 60 years,
reached north Norfolk in the evening and made its way south through the
night.Flood waters have receding in many areas but there will be further high tides later on Friday.
Scotland is facing snow alerts after a fierce storm earlier battered the UK, claiming two lives.
"There will still be
exceptionally high tides today and tomorrow and I would ask everybody to
pay very close attention to advice from the Environment Agency and also
to follow instructions from the police, local government and the
emergency services," he said afterwards.
The Environment Agency, which covers England and Wales, has dozens of severe flood warnings in place.Many of the severe warnings - which mean "danger to life" - relate to areas in the east of England, where there are also about 200 lower-level warnings and alerts.
The agency said some flood defences had been breached but repairs were under way.
A second tidal surge, which the agency said should be 1m (3ft) lower, has already passed Scotland and the far north of England and should reach Great Yarmouth at about 11:00 GMT and London at 15:00.
Collapsed properties Rescue teams have been working through the night in many areas.
- 9,000 people have evacuated their homes in Norfolk, mainly in the Great Yarmouth area, where at least 26 properties have been flooded and a lifeboat station has been washed into the sea
- Five beach chalets collapsed in Hemsby, Norfolk, due to the tidal surge
- Soldiers have helped the flood prevention effort in Norfolk and Essex
- The Environment Agency said 400 homes in the Humber region were affected by flood water on Thursday night
- In Kent, more than 500 properties were evacuated in areas including Sandwich, Seasalter, Faversham and the Medway towns
- Homes were flooded in Boston, Lincolnshire, and 223 in the county spent Thursday night in rest centres
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In all, more than 400 people who had been evacuated from the coastal resort of Jaywick tried to get some sleep among the wall displays and whiteboards.
A few miles away the waves had pummelled against the sea defences just metres from their homes. They told us they had never seen the water that high.
Around 2am, high tide came. We witnessed the nervousness as the waves began splashing over the sea wall.
The emergency services had advised residents in 2,500 homes here to leave. While many did just that - others like Jane Nash didn't move an inch.
In the end, their worst fears were not realised and Jaywick fared much better than others spots along the east coast.
They'll be hoping that luck continues when the next two high tides arrive in the coming 24 hours.
Fleeing the floods
For Essex pensioners Joan and Reenie, the staffroom of a local secondary school became home for the night.In all, more than 400 people who had been evacuated from the coastal resort of Jaywick tried to get some sleep among the wall displays and whiteboards.
A few miles away the waves had pummelled against the sea defences just metres from their homes. They told us they had never seen the water that high.
Around 2am, high tide came. We witnessed the nervousness as the waves began splashing over the sea wall.
The emergency services had advised residents in 2,500 homes here to leave. While many did just that - others like Jane Nash didn't move an inch.
In the end, their worst fears were not realised and Jaywick fared much better than others spots along the east coast.
They'll be hoping that luck continues when the next two high tides arrive in the coming 24 hours.
Trains across Scotland were
stopped on Thursday, but ScotRail said it expected to run services as
scheduled from the start of Friday.
The Scottish Environment Protection Agency has now lifted its flood warnings but the Met Office has yellow weather warnings in place for snow in northern Scotland until 12:00 GMT.There are also yellow warnings for ice in parts of Northern Ireland and north-west England, and wind on England's east coast. Yellow warnings mean "be aware".
High tides in parts of north Wales battered by storms hours earlier passed without further major flooding.
Lifeboat crews from south Wales were drafted in to help colleagues in the north amid fears coastal areas could be hit for a second time in 24 hours.
But emergency services have reported a mostly quiet Friday morning so far.
Northern Ireland Electricity (NIE) said it had restored power to most customers after strong winds caused disruption to supplies.
The BBC's Nick Beake spoke to people in Clacton-on-Sea in Essex, who evacuated their homes overnight
Conditions across the UK are expected to have improved by the weekend.
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