Report says clear flood resilience targets needed

Report says clear flood resilience targets needed

The continual wet weather and subsequent flooding issues that have affected all parts of the UK, are adding to the continual outcry for more measures to be implemented to help the property market tackle the issue.

Recently, the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (EFRA) Select Committee has published a report which calls for clear flood-resilience targets.

The report highlights a number of essential measures to help tackle flooding, including continuing investment in new and maintenance of existing flood defences, as well as improvements in property flood protection, to enhance the nation’s resilience to flooding.

The measures proposed in the report include the need to make a clear statement of ambition to ensure the nation’s resilience to flooding,

Andy Bord, chief executive of Flood Re, said:

“We welcome the EFRA select committee’s recognition that severe weather events have already become the rule and not the exception in the UK. They are right to highlight the need for long-term funding to maintain existing, as well as new, flood defences.

“Yet while defences are important, they are only part of the solution to the long-term challenges posed by climate change. The Committee’s report highlights the fact that a ‘step change is needed in promoting the uptake of appropriate property flood resilience measures’. We believe our proposals for Flood Performance Certificates can play an important role by providing information to homeowners on flood risk and potential resilience measures.

“To complement these measures on individual properties, it is vital that the planning system works effectively at a local level to ensure that development does not take place in areas at risk of flooding.

“In the year that COP-26 comes to the UK, the committee’s report is an important contribution to the ongoing debate of how best to mitigate the impact of flooding – one of the most damaging manifestations of climate change.

“As the government has already shown leadership in its commitment to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050, the UK likewise has an opportunity to promote place-based resilience and support economic growth as a world leader in adaptation with the adoption of appropriate resilience standards.”

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