Environment Agency
[ Pitt Review: Key Implications for Insurers ] |
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Source: Edited and amended by Ambiental from the Pitt Review: Learning lessons from the 2007 floods; 2008. The 400+ page Pitt Review, published in June presents findings and outcomes from the 2007 summer flooding in the UK. These include guidelines to improve flood planning, prediction, mitigation, response and recovery. The 92 recommendations of the review comprise steps to ensure:
Outlined below is a summary of the relevant information and Pitt’s recommendations for insurers as compiled by Ambiental from the Pitt Review 2008. [ INSURANCE-SPECIFIC RECOMMENDATION ]Recommendation 31: In flood risk areas, insurance notices should include information on flood risk and the simple steps that can be taken to mitigate the effects.
[ RISK TO ASSETS ]Recommendation 51: Relevant government departments and the Environment Agency should work with infrastructure operators to identify the vulnerability and risk of assets to flooding and a summary of the analysis should be published in Sector Resilience Plans. Recommendation 54: The Government should extend the duty to undertake business continuity planning to infrastructure operating Category 2 responders to a standard equivalent to BS25999, and that accountability is ensured through an annual benchmarking exercise within each sector. [ LEGISLATION ]Recommendation 28: The forthcoming flooding legislation should be a single unifying Act that addresses all sources of flooding, clarifies responsibilities and facilitates flood risk management.
[ MODELLING AND SURFACE WATER FLOODING ]Recommendations 2-5: The Environment Agency should work with partners to urgently take forward work to develop tools and techniques to model surface water flooding.
[ PLANNING ]Recommendation 7: There should be a presumption against building in high flood risk areas, in accordance with PPS25, including giving consideration to all sources of flood risk, and ensuring that developers make a full contribution to the costs both of building and maintaining any necessary defences.
Recommendation 8: The operation and effectiveness of PPS25 and the Environment Agency’s powers to challenge development should be kept under review and strengthened if and when necessary.
Recommendation 9: Householders should no longer be able to lay impermeable surfaces as of right on front gardens and the Government should consult on extending this policy to back gardens and business premises. Recommendation 10: The automatic right to connect surface water drainage of new developments to the sewerage systems should be removed. Recommendation 16: Local authorities should collate and map the main flood risk management and drainage assets (over and underground), including a record of their ownership and condition. [ DAMS AND RESERVOIRS ]Recommendation 57: The Government should provide Local Resilience Forums with the inundation maps for both large and small reservoirs to enable them to assess risks and plan for contingency, warning and evacuation and the outline maps be made available to the public online as part of wider flood risk information.
[ IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DIRECTIVE ]Recommendation 86: The Government should publish an action plan to implement the recommendations of this Review, with a Director in DEFRA overseeing the programme of delivery and issuing regular progress updates. Recommendation 87: The Government should establish a Cabinet Committee with a remit to improve the country’s ability to deal with flooding and implement the recommendations of this Review. |
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