UK told - prepare for mass floods in future
Astudy says flooding caused by climate change could affect
fivemillion a year by 2080. Flooding caused by heavier rainfall will be
the major threat to Britain from climate change in the coming decades,
potentially costing the country billions a year, a new assessment of the
risks of global warming concluded recently.

Floods caused by rain in UK |
New research commissioned by the Government shows that if no further
plans are made to adapt to changing flood risks, as temperatures rise
and population grows, by the 2080s damage to buildings and property
could reach £12bn per year, compared with current costs of £1.2bn. In
the worst-case scenario, five million people could be affected.
Flooding is regarded as the most serious of 100 separate challenges
from a changing climate to Britain's economy, society and natural
environment, which have been identified in a comprehensive new study,
the Climate Change Risk Assessment (CCRA).
These include increased health problems for vulnerable people in
hotter summers, increased pressure on the UK's water resources, droughts
affecting farmers and the potential introduction of new pests and
diseases.
The study says that if no further precautions are taken, the number
of people affected by flooding is likely to hit between 1.66 million and
3.64 million annually by the 2050s, and by 2.43 million to 4.98 million
by the 2080s.
It is significant that of the many problems posed by climate
change,flooding is now seen as the most important.
The man behind the CCRA, Sir Bob Watson, Chief Scientific Adviser at
the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, said. "I think
the flooding issue is the most dominant."
However, this seems at odds with the Government's spending
priorities, as expenditure on flood defence has been cut by 27 percent
from the last Labour administration's £354m annually, to £259m a year
for the next four years. "Ministers are playing Russian roulette with
people's homes and businesses by cutting too far, too fast," the shadow
Environment Secretary, Mary Creagh, said.
The flooding threat comes mainly from the more intense rainfall
predicted in a warmer atmosphere.
"What the climate projections show, especially in winter, is
significantly more precipitation, but also more heavy precipitation,"
Sir Bob said.
Such cloudbursts can cause river flooding, but also the new
phenomenon of surface water flooding in towns when volumes of rainwater
are too big for drainage systems to deal with. Both of these happened in
the summer of 2007, which was Britain's wettest.
Sir Bob said the current risk assessment was based on modelling of
river flooding and coastal flooding, which will be made worse by rises
in sea-level. But it does not include the risk from surface water
flooding, which is still being researched.
If we want to get a feel for what the future may hold, in terms of
flooding, we should look back at the washout summer of 2007. This was
the wettest summer recorded in Britain since rainfall records began in
1766.
It was characterised not only by incessant rain, but especially by
two stupendous downpours, the first coming on June 24 in Yorkshire, and
the second on 19 July centred on the valley of the River Severn.
The former displayed the new phenomenon of surface water flooding,
when the drainage in towns such as Hull and Doncaster simply could not
cope; the latter downpour led the Severn to burst its banks and turned
the town of Tewkesbury into an island.
I drove through the July downpour; it was the heaviest rainfall I
have ever experienced in my life, including the Amazon in the rainy
season.
- Michael Mccarthy The Independent
(AFP/Getty Images)
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