2.4 flood resilience at individual property level (r.craig)

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Flood Resilience at Individual Property Level Presented by: Robbie Craig Date: 25 March 2015

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Page 1: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Flood Resilience

at Individual

Property Level

Presented by: Robbie Craig

Date: 25 March 2015

Page 2: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Numpties…

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http://youtu.be/blTOzfGxvy8

Page 3: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Resilience: Policy Context

• Floods Strategy: Pitt Review (post 2007 floods) – Made important recommendations about improving resilience at a local level

• 2010 Flood and Water Management Act : – as of 2014 fully implemented most Pitt Review recommendations,

– assigned responsibilities created lead local authority role in County Councils

• 2011 Localism Act : – gave local councils and communities in England greater control over local decisions like housing

and planning

• Water Act 2014: – managing a 20-25 year transition to risk reflective pricing of flood insurance for domestic

properties.

• 2007-2011 Defra and Environment Agency Property Level Grant Schemes. – Found that some projects amplified the potential impact of their PLP equipment on reducing their

risk of damages through additional community actions or investment.

• 2012 -2015 Flood Resilience Community Pathfinder Scheme: – pilot project to enable communities to find simple, effective ways to minimize their flood risk,

improve their levels of preparedness

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Page 4: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

What is Resilience?

• “Disaster Resilience is the ability of countries, communities and households to manage change, by maintaining or transforming living standards in the face of shocks or stresses - such as earthquakes, drought or violent conflict - without compromising their long-term prospects”.

• Defining Disaster Resilience: DfID, 2011

• …resilience is not so much a response to flood hazard but is an characteristic of the way in which the flood response and the subsequent recovery process are managed.

• After the Rain – learning the lessons from flood recovery in Hull - Whittle et al. 2010

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Page 5: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

How Do We Build Resilience?

Social

(demographic variables,

vulnerability)

Economic (employment,

insurance, deprivation, property

tenure)

Institutional (flood action group, local

resilience forum)

Infrastructure (type of housing,

PLP)

Community Capital

(strength of local ‘glue’)

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Based on Cutter et al. (2010), ‘Disaster Resilience Indicators for Benchmarking

Baseline Conditions’, Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management,

7(1): 1-22.

Domains of resilience

The evaluation has established a framework for measuring resilience. Resilience is the product of building capacity across five domains.

Page 6: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Property-Level Resilience (PLP)

Managing Flood Water

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Adaptation - Fabric of Building

Page 7: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Example flood risk management strategy

Neighbourhood A

Neighbourhood B

Page 8: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Property Level Resilience in Action

2013 Flooding East Peckham Kent

• Flood gates and flood boards slowed the water entry sufficiently to allow furniture to be raised on bricks

• Floors and exterior walls sealed - water did ooze through the floor but was swept into a sump containing a submersible pump. Located in the living room.

• A gully inside the house took water from a drain near the front door straight to the sump.

• Despite 18 inches of floodwater outside, the Property Level Protection measures kept most of the water away, with only an inch inside.

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Page 9: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Property-Level

Resilience Flood Risk

Management

Cost of property-level resilience

is between £5000 and £9000

per property.

The Repair and Renew grant

temporary grant launched in

2013/14 has (so far) accepted

claims of £12.8m for 4552

properties

50 new schemes at planning

stage for FRM Partnership

Funding between 2016 and

2021

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Page 10: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Its Not Just About Stuff: Barriers to

Creating Resilient People & Communities 1. Evidence for the benefits of taking action on

resilience is weak.

2. We need to develop a better understanding about what motivates communities’ and individuals’ to engage in flood risk management

3. Confidence: many individuals lack previous experience about what to do when they receive a warning or are flooded.

4. Whether information to help the public manage flood risk is fully understood by its intended audience

5. The incentives provided by the current and potential future insurance market mechanisms for flood resilience

6. Effects of other incentives on household level flood management responses

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Page 11: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Equanimity

Shrewd

Gregarious

Listening

Irresolute Coasting

Non-acquisitive

Car casual Bodily ease Ozone friendly Interconnected

Inquisitive Artisan

Exhilaration

Sexual awareness

Self assured

Passivity

Solitary

Independent No sweat

Financial morality Solo New family

Equivalence Self secure Feeling good

Boldness

Global

Adaptable

Non-reflective

Distant

Acquiescence

Indulgent diet

Complacent Luddism

Constrained spender

Skeptical

Honesty

Distracted

Price conscious

Wrong clothes Prudent

Close family

Reserved

Socialist

Respected

Showhome

Looking good

Persona

Pleasure

Bargain hunter

Busy Asocial

Convenience

Sensitive Speculate

Local

Spiritual Budget bedlam Impulsive spender

Cheerful Healthy lifestyle

Modest unease

Discipline

Tolerant

WYSIWYG TV casual

Money casual Beauty

Unplanned

CULTURAL DYNAMICS

Success

Stuff (symbols of

success)

Experiences ( “)

Identity

Belonging

Safety

Ideas

Ethics

Exploration

Needs (values)

www.campaignstrategy.org

New behaviours move this way

www.cultdyn.co.uk

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Its Not Just About Stuff: Community

Pathfinders • Aimed at helping communities to find

effective local approaches to resilience.

• Started in 2013, 13 projects investing £5.2m: Defra contributing £4m.

• Variety of audiences targeted and different scales of intervention.

• Rigorous evaluations at both project and scheme level.

• Outcomes to help develop policy about what works at the community scale.

• Scheme report autumn 2015, final conference London November 2015

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Page 13: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Case Study

The Cornwall Community

Flood Forum (CCFF).

• Small rain events can trigger flash flooding in steep valleys.

• The effectiveness of drainage systems are reduced by leaf litter blocking drains and gulleys

• “Community Payback” volunteers worked to remove leaves & clear blockages in 3 communities.

• Impact: – Practical outcome in Lostwithiel– no floods

– Motivational outcome for 105 offenders - residents recognized hard work and personally thanked them for their efforts.

• More information http://climatevision.co.uk/projects-2

Maintaining Activity:

Cornwall Leaf Litter Project

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Page 14: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Businesses - Resilience

Flooding Business Issues People mention in studies after flood events that seeing businesses re-starting trading activity is a sign of things getting back to normal.

Many SME “muddle through” after flooding, many uninsured or unwilling to claim, a few take a practical approach to future flooding incidents

However - there are also examples of businesses recovering quickly suffering economically because nearby businesses did not recover so quickly and the public assumed they would not be trading.

Page 15: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Business Opportunities– Developing a

Market UK Flood Products Industry

• Wrong sort of Flooding, installation errors, householder capability

• Range of small and medium sized companies produce a range of innovative products;

• Products installed in around 10,000 properties

• Still “Development Push” rather than ‘Market Pull” in sector

• Weak Industrial sector – ‘feast or famine’ reliant on orders from Government, local authorities or Utilities.

Government Role: Building Trust

• BSI Kitemark (PAS1188) verifies a product has been independently tested and is fit for purpose.

• Property Protection Advisor online tool gives tailored advice about costs and benefits of installing Property level FRM measures;

• Flood Risk Report; verifies the change in likelihood of damages following resilience work.

• Independent PLP Advisors – Defra is researching competencies and requirements for this role: assist Householders and Insurance verify quality of installation.

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Page 16: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Flood Resilience

Local Flood Risk

Management & Resilience

Robbie Craig

Water and Flood Risk Management, Defra

Area 3C, Nobel house, 17 Smith Square,

London, SW1P 3JR; 020 72 38 15 47

[email protected]

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Page 17: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Improving The Evidence Base

• http://randd.defra.gov.uk/

• FD2607: Developing the Evidence Base for

Flood Resistance and Resilience.

• FD2657: Establishing the Cost Effectiveness

of Property Flood Protection.

• FD2688:Post-Installation Effectiveness of

Property Level Flood Protection.

• FD2664: The evaluation of the Flood

Resilience Community Pathfinder Scheme.

• FD2681: Flood Resilience Surveyor Project

to map competencies of independent PLP

advisers

• FD2682 Flood Resilient Repair - low cost

adaptation of homes and supplier behaviour

change

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Page 18: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Floodwater can enter a home by many routes

Doors

Airbricks

Drainage

pipes Underneath the

property

Through

brickwork

Page 19: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Policy Issues

• In England, more than 5 million properties are at risk of flooding, nearly 1 in 6.

• More than 200 homes at risk of complete loss to coastal erosion in the next

20 years. 2,000 more could become at risk over this period.

• The latest climate projections indicate that sea levels will rise, and there will

be increasingly severe and frequent rainstorms. Risk of floods will increase.

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Flood event

Properties flooded

Cost (ABI )

2007 55,000 £3bn

2009 1,800 £174 m

2012 8,800 £1.19bn

2013/4 12,000 £1.1bn

Page 20: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

England Winter Floods 2013/14

• The Government led a major recovery effort to help people get back on their feet.

• £560 million Government Money committed to recovery support funding.

• £480m Insurance losses

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Page 21: 2.4 Flood resilience at individual property level (R.Craig)

Repair and Renew Grant

• Launched in the wake of flooding in 2013/14.

• To help home onwers make properties resilient as they repaired them

• Contribution of up to £5000 per property

• So far….5000 claims – around £12.8m authorized

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