Storm Bert brought heavy rain, gale-force winds and snow across the country last weekend, overwhelming flood defences already described as being in disrepair. Parts of south Wales and south-west England, where a month of rain pummelled sodden towns and villages, fared particularly badly.
At least five people died, 350,000 homes in England lost power and more than 500 homes and businesses were flooded. As of 4pm on Tuesday, around 100 flood warnings remained in effect across England and Wales, including one severe warning indicating a danger to life for the River Nene at Billing Aquadrome in Northamptonshire.
The extreme weather has prompted renewed scrutiny of the country's preparedness for climate-related weather events. A report by the cross-parliamentary Public Accounts Committee earlier this year had highlighted insufficient maintenance of flood defences and concluded that the approach "to keeping our citizens safe in this area is contradictory and self-defeating".
Climate scientists from the World Weather Attribution group found that the record-breaking wet weather over the last 18 months - which has caused significant flooding - was made 10 times more likely and 20% wetter by human-caused global heating.
For today's newsletter, I spoke with Guardian environment reporter Helena Horton about whether the widespread flooding triggered by Storm Bert might finally push the government to overhaul its approach to flood preparedness. That's right after the headlines.
The Met Office has been accused of incompetence and sluggishness in its response to Storm Bert. Alex Barros-Curtis, the Labour MP for Cardiff West, said the agency was "letting down" the public and criticised its decision to issue a yellow warning instead of an amber or red alert.
In response to mounting criticism, the Met Office said it is "committed to learning the lessons from Storm Bert" but said the storm was well forecast because rainfall levels were "within the expected range of that forecast".
Helena Horton says anger at the Met Office is misplaced. "They aren't actually supposed to predict floods. They predict rainfall," she says. The storm's devastation, she explains, stemmed from fundamental weaknesses in the country's flood-defence infrastructure. "I think in time the anger will be directed at the government if nothing is done to fix this issue," she says.
Traditional flood barriers are the country's primary defence mechanism. However, more than a decade of austerity has affected necessary maintenance - the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs experienced budget cuts of up to 45% - which has led to widespread deterioration of critical infrastructure.
Earlier this year, the National Audit Office reported that 203,000 properties are at greater risk of flooding due to under-investment. This figure is likely to increase as climate breakdown triggers more unpredictable heavy rainfall. "These periods of extreme weather are really hard to predict - we're seeing floods in areas where we didn't previously see them," Helena says, highlighting that many existing flood defences were designed for traditionally flood-prone regions.
The situation has gotten even worse because of project cuts: last year, the Environment Agency removed a quarter of the flood defence projects.
A deluge of sudden rainfall is not the only cause for concern. Floods can also result from continuous wet weather, a pattern the south of England has experienced over the past 18 months. Prolonged rain can overcharge rivers and groundwater, meaning even moderate rainfall can precipitate severe flooding.
The Environment Agency warns that 5.2m properties in England face flood risks. Over the last decade, more than 100,000 properties have been constructed in flood zones - and if planning trends continue for the next half-century, the number of properties in flood plains could almost double.
"We're going to see people's homes becoming uninsurable in areas where that wasn't happening previously," Helena says. "We're going to see more lives lost, and businesses facing even more risks at a difficult economic time. It's going to cause disruption and upset for many people."
As environmental scientist Aaron Thierry wrote in the Guardian, even the "most resilient communities can be ground down by back-to-back disasters. The psychological strain is immense. How many times can you rebuild, knowing that in a rapidly heating world such floods are becoming more frequent and even more severe?"
There are fairly straightforward nature-based solutions that could mitigate some of the damage done by flooding like restoring peatlands. "Good quality peat is like a big sponge," Helena says, explaining that it can hold a lot of water, supports rare ecosystems and stores huge amounts of carbon. Peatlands have been called the UK's "national rainforests". But a lot of this vibrant land has been burnt for farming - a Greenpeace investigation identified 251 peatland burning incidents between October 2021 and April 2022.
Burning peat strips its moisture, so it is no longer able to hold water when it rains. "Restoring our peatlands could be one relatively cheap way [to help fix] the problem," Helena says.
These nature-based solutions alone are not enough. The most effective way to make the country more flood resilient is increased investment. Yet Labour has not pledged additional funding for flood defences during its term, and is in fact proposing a further 2% cut to Defra's budget.
Instead, Labour has convened a flood resilience taskforce filled with experts, which it claims will be able to allocate the limited funding effectively. "There's scepticism about this because, simply, without funding you can't really fix these problems and often government task forces don't achieve a huge amount," Helena says.
The government's response - creating another bureaucratic layer that lacks the financial resources to achieve much - continues a longstanding pattern. "We have all these different agencies that are there to deal with flooding - the Internal Drainage Boards, the Environment Agency, Natural England, and Defra itself that all are doing their own thing but they don't really work in tandem," Helena says. "I think the whole system needs an overhaul so all of these disparate groups come together to create a holistic flood strategy that actually is fit for purpose in the 21st century".
Champions League | Manchester City were 3-0 up against Feyenoord, Erling Haaland scoring a double, but Feyenoord scored three goals in the last 15 minutes for a 3-3 draw. Arsenal proved far too good for a Sporting side still reeling from Ruben Amorim's departure to win 5-1.
MMA | Major retailers in the UK and Ireland are to stop selling alcoholic drinks associated with Conor McGregor. The decision by Tesco and Musgrave came after Nikita Hand, who said McGregor raped her a Dublin hotel in December 2018, won a civil claim for damages against him last week.
Football | Manchester United spent £8.6m on redundancies in the first quarter of the fiscal year, due to Sir Jim Ratcliffe's drive to reduce the club workforce by 250 from about 1,000, the club's latest accounts show.
The Guardian this morning splashes on "Biden hails 'historic' ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah". That's across the top of the Times though its lead story is "Carmaker blames EV targets as plant shuts". "Electric vehicle rules may be watered down" reports the Telegraph. "Labour's net-zero electric car plan in chaos" is the Mail's version. The i says "Weight-loss jabs for jobless in Labour drive to get people back to work". "I lost my faith in the world" - the Southport stabbings teacher speaks out in the Metro. "Trading partners warn of damage to US as Trump pledges punitive tariffs" - that's the top story in the Financial Times while the Express leads with "Xmas dinner hits £50 after budget 'mess'". The Daily Mirror's main page one coverage is "Labour's big breakfast plan ... Dawn of a new era ... all primary schoolkids will be eligible for FREE food before classes start".
A bit of good news to remind you that the world's not all bad
Comedian Chris McCausland turned down the chance to appear on Strictly Come Dancing multiple times because it terrified him. Along with concern about enduring the punishing training regime and mastering the intricate dance routines, he was worried about the pressure of representing his community as the show's first blind contestant.
But this year McCausland finally decided to embrace the sequins, and he's wowed fans with his performances and fast become the bookies' favourite to win. He says of his decision to take part: "As well as being a comedian, I am - whether I like it or not - representative of another group of people, people who are blind, people with a disability and people who are underrepresented. When you weigh that up, and you stop thinking about yourself so much, and the fact that you're shitting your pants, there becomes more benefit than risk."
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