England – 307 flood warnings and 500 flood defences delayed and no Labour promise to help

Imagine this was in Scotland.

According to BBC Politics, but not headlined anywhere else:

Rishi Sunak is being urged by opposition parties to do more to help areas in England affected by flooding. Hundreds of homes have been evacuated following heavy rainfall, with flooded roads and railway tracks causing travel disruption.

Labour said the PM should set up a “taskforce” to manage the response, and set out what support will be available. He is also coming under pressure to visit flood-hit areas.

The Liberal Democrats said he should go to affected areas to “see for himself the devastation caused by these floods”. Mr Sunak said he had spoken to flooding victims and the Environment Agency was responding “appropriately and with all due haste”.

Then:

The government had committed to better protecting 336,000 more properties between 2021 and 2027 – but the spending watchdog report found this was reduced to 200,000.

The report also found the Environment Agency had removed 500 of the 2,000 new flood defence projects originally included in the government’s six-year flood and coastal erosion programme.

And notably:

Labour has not committed more funding to the project.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-67895237

In Scotland, one third of 42 have been delayed but none have been cancelled. https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/24016178.one-third-snps-promised-flood-defence-schemes-completed/

Last year when heavy rains (40-50mm in 24 hours) hit the whole UK and there was major flooding in England but none in Scotland.

Why?

As far back as 2006, researchers at the English College of Estates Management, whose patron was HRH Prince of Wales, made a number of highly encouraging comments about the achievements of the Labour-run Scottish Executive, SEPA and the Local Authorities:

As far as flood protection is concerned, unlike in England, the 1 in 200-year standard of protection is ‘universal’ for all new buildings, with a 1,000-year standard for such vulnerable uses as old people’s homes, schools, hospitals etc. In addition, construction in flood hazard areas has almost completely ended. Crichton (2003: 26) estimates that “the active flood management programme currently in progress will result in almost all high-risk properties being protected against the 200-year flood within the next three years, taking climate change into account.” It is also interesting to note that the Scottish Executive grants for flood defences have never been refused on the grounds of budget restraints and there is no rationing of flood defence spending.

It is clear, however, that the more stringent building standards which are applied in Scotland ensure that severe storms result in much less property damage than comparable events in England. Also, the level of flood protection and the commitment of funding to achieve flood protection are higher in Scotland than in England.’

College of Estates Management at: https://www.cem.ac.uk/media/28193/flooding.pdf

More recently, with SNP leadership, the favourable comparison still seems to hold. Published research from the esteemed Joseph Rowntree Foundation, in 2012, seems to support my first impressions quite strongly:

‘Where English planning regulations permit building in flood plains where there is no alternative, Scottish Planning Policy does not permit building in areas in which ‘the flood risk exceeds the 200-year return period’, i.e. where in any year there is a greater than 0.5 per cent probability of flooding. Scotland has stronger regulations governing the capacity of sewage and drainage systems for new building. It also has stronger minimum standards for flood defences. Building regulations ensuring flood resilience in the housing stock are more developed. Scottish planners, through Flood Liaison and Advice Groups, are engaged with local communities, the emergency services, insurers and other interested parties in drawing up flood plans. The differences in regulatory regimes between England and Scotland are reflected in the number of households that are at risk of flooding, and the resilience of communities in responding to those risks.’

The level of investment will be one factor in these differences. In recent years, spending in England and Wales has declined seriously after significant increases under Labour in 1997 to 2010, as revealed in a UK Parliament Briefing Paper from 2015:

‘Central Government spending on flood defence in 2010-11 was cut soon after the Coalition Government was formed. Spending was reduced in one year by £30 million or 5%. In the 2010 Comprehensive Spending Review (2011-12 to 2014-15), a total of £2.17 billion in central government funding was provided for flood and coastal defence. This represented “a six percent fall in central government funding”, The Committee on Climate Change calculated that this represented a real term cut of around 20% compared to the previous spending period.’

In sharp contrast, for Scotland, we see in a Scottish Parliament Committee Paper for 2014-2015, evidence of increasing investment:

‘With regard to flood protection and alleviation, the Committee welcomes the cash terms increases in the funding available to SEPA, and to the Natural Assets and Flooding  budget, both of which sit in the RAE portfolio. The Committee believes that, due to climate change, severe weather events will become increasingly likely in Scotland in years to come, and it is therefore essential that flood forecasting and warning systems be as accurate and robust as possible. The Committee welcomes the increased funding for flood forecasting and warning in the RAE portfolio and recommends that the Scottish Government continue to ensure sufficient funding is available to improve flood forecasting and warning systems, to ensure greater consistency across the whole of Scotland.’

As for more recent evidence of superiority in the Scottish system, see this at the Scottish government site and little (surprise, surprise) MSM coverage of it at the time:

‘£42 million a year plan over the next decade.

More than 10,000 families are to benefit from a ten year strategy to protect homes in many of Scotland’s most flood-prone communities. The plan is the result of grant funding totalling £420 million and follows an agreement reached between the Scottish Government and COSLA. The cash will be used to deliver 40 new flood protection projects and support local flood risk management plans. More than 130 flood protection studies will be carried out to help find potential solutions for another 26,000 residential properties currently at risk. The announcement came as the First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, fulfilled her pledge to return to Newton Stewart following an earlier visit in the aftermath of flooding at Hogmanay.’

So, unlike the UK Government, the Scottish Government has maintained or bettered the investment and the sophistication in flood prevention here. Had I been writing in 2006, the Labour-controlled Scottish Executive would have rightly claimed any credit for performance north of the border. In 2016, the SNP-controlled Scottish Parliament can do the same. Will BBC Scotland allow them to do it? They clearly didn’t in the run-up to General Election in 2016 so I doubt it.

There you have it, my attempt to shore up our defence plans against a flood of BBC bias (See what I did there, again, again?) as we approach the UK Monsoon season.

Sources:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-37306094

http://news.sky.com/story/16312m-flood-defence-plan-an-elastoplast-say-victims-10569571

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Environment/Water/Flooding

College of Estates Management at:https://www.cem.ac.uk/media/28193/flooding.pdf

UK Parliament Briefing Paper at: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:tGK3kUO-iKEJ:www.parliament.uk/briefing-papers/sn05755.pdf+&cd=4&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=uk

Scottish Parliament Paper at:http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/parliamentarybusiness/CurrentCommittees/70875.aspx

Scottish Act on Control of Flood water at:http://www.gov.scot/Resource/Doc/1057/0094052.pdf

WWF Report at: http://nationalfloodforum.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/floodplanner_web.pdf

9 thoughts on “England – 307 flood warnings and 500 flood defences delayed and no Labour promise to help

  1. Westminster warned repeatedly. Nothing done. Austerity. Too busy ruining the economy with Brexit. Mismanaging the pandemic. Covid. US/Chinese illegally developing deadly viruses to kill millions of people and ruin the world economy.

    Westminster Gov total incompetence. Funding Covid £270Billion over two years. Wasting £Billions misappropriated by Tory associates. Fraud and corruption.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Westminster funding nuclear decommissioning £13Billion a year over 10 years £130Billion. More increases during that period. Increasing over time.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. About 15 years ago, I attended a presentation at the Glasgow Philosophical Society by the woman who was the Director of flood prevention for England. (She was Scottish and had attended a Scottish University.)

    She said that the Geology and geological history of England meant that it is prone to flooding and that continuous measures including pumping have to be undertaken to prevent widespread flooding particularly in areas close to the River Trent, but elsewhere, too.

    Historically England was connected to mainland Europe where Belgium and the Netherlands are now. The North Sea did not exist. Some rivers which now discharge into the North Sea formerly discharged westwards. With geological changes the direction of flow of some rivers changed and the natural drainage is in some places into the current centre of England. In cases like that continuous pumping is required. In other places, such as the Somerset levels, humans, centuries ago reclaimed low lying flooded land and as settlements developed there had to be continual human works to hold back flooding.

    With the privatisation of water and sewerage and the severe scaling back of investment in public works, flooding has become more common and that is before climate change caused more intense rainfall.

    The floods in England are a consequence of profiteering and cuts to public investment. This is a POLITICAL issue, but the English media never take that tack. In Scotland if there is puddling in a street because leaves are blocking gullies, the media and unionists immediately blame the Scottish Government.

    Liked by 6 people

  4. One of the main reasons that England has such a large population is because,historically,it had a large amount of agricultural ground which could support it.
    This ground is in the main fairly low and flat lying and as such vulnerable to water ingress,either from increased rainfall or rising sea levels.
    Unfortunately,this is going to result in England,and Scotland by dependency on England,having to rely on food imports from other parts of the world.
    This is not sustainable in the longer term and we need to develop alternative means to allow us to adapt and be self reliant.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Back in the 19th Century Andrew Carnegie said that Britain would become an overcrowded island unable to feed itself. He was pretty accurate in that bit of prophecy.

      In the early 1980s Britain produced around 64% of its food and it was said that this was pretty much the max it could produce. So not self-sufficirent in food then and with a growing population.

      During Tony Blair’s time in office food production had fallen to 50% and the rest was imported. Now we have left the EU and all the trade deals we were part of as members of the EU where do you think we will get the food to make up the shortfall?

      Liked by 5 people

    1. ps. If you can only see the top four most recent headlines –
      Where it says “Headlines Matching Humza Yousaf” there is a blue “>”. click on the blue “>”. This will then reveal ALL the results.

      Like

  5. Dear E Prof Robertson,
    I think what you do is excellent and a selfless act to defend against the lies and propaganda we are subjected to dally in Scotland. However, can you please ban anyone using ‘Anonymous’ as a descriptor please? It would be appreciated.

    Liked by 1 person

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