Undertaking regular maintenance of England’s main rivers would
help improve flooding in rural areas, the Country Land and
Business Association (CLA) has said.
Recent storms have wreaked havoc across rural communities,
damaging agricultural land and businesses as well as people’s
homes.
The Government, as part of its 2020 Budget, pledged £5.2 billion
funding for flood risk reduction - earmarked specifically for new
infrastructure.
But the CLA, which represents 28,000 rural businesses across
England and Wales, estimates an extra £75 million per year is
needed for maintenance of flood-risk assets to help stave off
flooding.
The CLA says 3.7 million acres of land in England and Wales are
at risk from flooding.
CLA President Mark Bridgeman said:
“Many farmers and businesses have suffered catastrophic
consequences of flooding from extreme weather events, and it
could get worse.
“In many rural areas the key issue is not a need for new
infrastructure, but the fact that flood defences on main rivers
are not being consistently maintained by the Environment Agency.
This greatly increases the pressure on land managers who farm
alongside main rivers, and those who manage flood risk further
upstream – such as internal drainage boards.
“For flood risk management to be effective, everyone must play
their part, and currently the Environment Agency is vastly under
resourced. For this reason, the CLA is calling for extra funding
specifically to help the Environment Agency uphold their
statutory responsibility to mitigate flood risk.
“Right now, some farmland is used to store water to protect
communities downstream from further flooding. This is saving
potentially millions of pounds’ worth of damage to local homes
and businesses, but in the vast majority of cases it’s done
without compensation. Whatever crop happens to be standing in
those fields is lost.
“While acts like these help the community, it still leaves a big
hole for many flood-hit businesses in the countryside which is
why Government needs to come forward with this extra investment
to help mitigate the risk of flooding altogether.”