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Flood Risk Management in England : Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and Environment Agency

Part of the House of Commons Papers series
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This report finds that giving greater responsibility and discretion to local authorities to identify flood risk and target investment raises significant challenges, especially during a time of budget cuts and other newly devolved responsibilities.

The NAO considers that greater value for money can be achieved through these reforms, but key elements of what is required are not yet in place.

Local knowledge of surface water flood risk is far less advanced than national information on risk of flooding from rivers and the sea.

Local authorities are having difficulty in recruiting and retaining appropriately qualified staff.

Local decision-making is hampered by the need to cross-refer between nearly 20 different plans that affect local flood risk management.

It is not yet clear how the Department and the Environment Agency will provide assurance nationally that arrangements are working.

The Environment Agency has improved its efficiency since the NAO last reported in 2007.

There is a better understanding of the condition of existing sea and river defences. It has brought 98 per cent of defences classified as 'high consequence' if they fail, up to target condition and is directing more of its funding towards these defences.

The Agency estimates that, owing to climate change and ageing defences, an increase of GBP20 million is required on average each year between 2011 and 2035 to maintain the current level of flood protection.

However, central government funding to the Agency has reduced by 10 per cent over this spending review period compared with the last.

If central funding does not increase after 2014-15, defences will depend on significant additional funding being secured locally.

Currently, some 95 per cent of funding is provided by central government.

The NAO found that local bodies will be hard-pressed to plug any funding gap while under pressure to deliver a number of other newly devolved responsibilities. And the Department's plans to encourage more local funding could see some defence schemes that have attracted private or other funding going ahead in advance of schemes elsewhere that provide greater benefits.

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Product Details
TSO
0102976740 / 9780102976748
Paperback / softback
28/10/2011
United Kingdom
35 pages, col. figs, maps, tables
Professional & Vocational Learn More