A new Floods Resilience Taskforce to turbocharge the development
of flood defences and bolster the nation's resilience to extreme
weather has convened for the first time, Secretary of State for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs announced today (Thursday 12
September).
The Taskforce brings together the Secretary of State and Floods
Minister with representatives from
Defra, MHCLG, Home Office, Cabinet Office, the Environment
Agency, the Met Office, Local Resilience Forums, Mayoral Offices,
emergency responders and the National Farmers Union, among
others.
The expert group discussed how they will speed up and co-ordinate
flooding preparation and resilience between central government,
local authorities and community responders, and emergency
services.
The group will also use their collective experience and knowledge
to identify and protect vulnerable areas, including championing
the delivery of drainage systems, flood defences and natural
flood management schemes in communities.
This comes as the current Met Office outlook suggests autumn is
likely to be wetter than usual.
The Taskforce also outlined its plans to take a long-term,
strategic approach to the challenges of flooding. This will
support better protection for families across the country, as
well as underpinning the resilience of the economy to the growing
threat of climate change. These challenges include ensuring
that funding for national infrastructure remains sustainable into
the future.
Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs said:
Flooding devastates communities and businesses across the
country. For far too long the delivery of flood schemes has been
too slow and left communities underwater.
That is why the new Government is acting now to speed up the
building of flood defences and bolster our emergency response.
Floods Minister
said:
The climate crisis is the greatest global challenge we currently
face, and as an eyewitness to extreme flooding myself, I know the
devastating impact these events can have on our
livelihoods.
As chair of the Floods Resilience Taskforce, I will work closely
with our partners to ensure projects remain on track and not only
protect homes but create more green jobs and drive investment in
our towns.
The Environment Agency is the government's primary delivery
partner for flood defences and continues to support the
construction of hundreds of projects across the country.
Recognising the scale of the challenge, Environment Agency teams
have been prioritising the construction, maintenance, and repair
of key flood defences – including the Cockett Wick seawall in
Essex, which will ensure 3,000 homes and businesses are
protected better after a £12 million investment.
Caroline Douglass, Executive Director for Flood and
Coastal Risk Management at the Environment Agency,
said:
Protecting people and communities is our top priority, which will
only become more pressing as climate change brings more extreme
weather and rising sea levels.
This new Taskforce will look at the range of resilience measures
available to provide options to reduce flood risks in more
communities – and we will play our part to ensure essential
projects are delivered across the country.
5.5 million properties in England are at risk from flooding and
the country has just experienced the wettest 18 months on record
(to February 2024) following extreme weather including Storms
Babet and Ciarán.
The next meeting of the Taskforce will take place in early 2025
and will discuss longer-term oversight of wider flood resilience
strategy and investment, as well as any rapid learning on the
response to major flooding.
Last week, Floods Minister also met with representatives
from the insurance industry to discuss the role they can play in
building a resilient nation. The meeting explored the
support insurers can provide to their customers, which includes
raising more awareness and take up of Build Back Better, which
can provide for up to £10,000 in addition to like for like flood
repairs to enable future resilience of a property.
In August, the government also launched the Floods and Droughts
Research Infrastructure, which is backed by £40 million and will
be the first UK-wide network looking to understand the impact of
extreme weather conditions across the country, identifying where
incidents are likely to occur and planning to limit their impact.