Government urged to apply Flood Re to new builds

January 30, 2017 / Isla MacFarlane
Government urged to apply Flood Re to new builds

Mary Dhonau, chief executive of the Know Your Flood Risk campaign has publicly urged the government to “toughen up on building regulations” so that flood resilient measures are automatically included in all new-build properties that are deemed to be within a flood risk zone.

“I think it is now a matter of urgency that the Government toughens up on its planning and building regulation processes to make sure that any new builds located in ‘at risk’ areas automatically include measures to make the property flood resilient,” Mary Dhonau said.

“My concern is that Flood Re does not cover new build properties and therefore we must stop building houses that are simply not covered or prepared for future flood events; it’s not fair on the future generations who will have to deal with the dreadful aftermath that flood waters bring,” she added.

Landmark Information, the data partner for the Know Your Flood Risk campaign, has undertaken some cross-analysis of flood risk data from the Environment Agency, Natural Resources Wales and planning application data from Barbour ABI to determine the percentage of planning applications for new build properties that are deemed to be within an EA/NRW Flood Zone 3.

Between September 2015 and September 2016, nine out of 10 new build applications in the City of Kingston upon Hull were deemed to be within an EA/NRW Flood Zone 3. This is followed by Thurrock in Essex at 48%, Casnewydd-Newport at 37% and North Somerset at 32%.

“Having reviewed the data analysis from Landmark, it is clear that there are hundreds of applications submitted each year that fall in to a designated flood risk zone according to the Environment Agency and Natural Resources Wales’ parameters,” Dhonau said. “These stats don’t even take into account groundwater or surface water risks and so I fear the volume is greater still. I therefore agree with Efra’s call to Government to create far stronger planning rules, and penalties for those that breach them, to ensure future communities are not blighted by today’s failure to act.”

PICTURE CREDIT: Copyright John Chroston and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence

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