Flooding is the UK’s most serious natural hazard with one in six homes in the UK at risk. Only a third of people living in properties with a flood risk are aware of it, and almost two thirds don’t believe it will happen to them. And yet, when floods occur, they can blight lives and livelihoods for years. We know that taking flood action will save up to 10 times the cost of doing nothing, so what can we do?
Find out more about projects in the UK that are preparing for and combating flood risks, or jump ahead to learn more about what you can do in your area to do something bigger.
Inspiration read
Managing flood risk and coastal erosion in England
Flood and Coastal Resilience Innovation Programme
The FCRIP is part of the government’s National Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management Strategy. The programme is made up of 25 projects across England, which address current and future flood risks from the sea, rivers, groundwater and surface water. This ambitious and wide-ranging programme encourages local councils, companies and communities to collaborate locally and test new ways of preparing for flooding and coastal changes – so we can reduce the cost to people and places of future damage and disruption.
Innovative flood resilience actions
The resilience actions taken by communities in towns, cities and rural areas in this programme go beyond those typically funded by the government. They cover 25 very different opportunities, from new kinds of nature-based solutions and integrated water management, to community infrastructure and local emergency response equipment, to community preparedness and enhanced flood warning systems, to monitoring local assets and better protection for local businesses. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts: combinations of different resilience actions work together to provide even bigger improvements in resilience to flooding and coastal change than simply scaling individual actions.
Copying your perfect programme
FCRIP will run until 2027, but you don’t need to wait to see what’s already working. In doing something this big, there is a programme underway of interest to almost everyone. Any of these schemes – from actions at coastal or catchment level, to groundwater and sustainable drainage, to working with new technology – can be co-created, with either this larger agency or the community leading the collaboration. And as more people trial these programmes, they help provide useful cost-benefit evidence and practical learning on how to overcome the potential barriers, so even more local areas can take up similar programmes..
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Inspiration listen
Do Something Bigger
What would inspire you to do something bigger for climate and nature? In this, the first episode of the Carbon Copy Podcast series, Do Something Bigger, we introduce our year-long campaign: 25…
Do something bigger
Bigger, collective efforts play a crucial role in the complex challenges of flood preparedness and in improving our resilience to flooding. In tackling rising water levels where it knows no boundaries, we too need to come together and cooperate across neighbourhood and organisation boundaries.
With special thanks
to our partners: