last
updated 10th November 05
By 4ecotips
Environment
Agency launches campaign to tackle
flood apathy
The Environment Agency is warning
that too many people are ignoring
the risk of flooding in this country.
New research has revealed alarming
levels of complacency among households
at risk of flooding from rivers or
the sea, despite the increasing frequency
of flooding at home and abroad.
EA chief executive Barbara Young,
says: "Although we're unlikely
to see flooding in the UK like that
caused by the Boxing Day tsunami and
Hurricane Katrina, there is still
a significant flood threat here from
extreme rainfall and coastal surges.
"Devastating floods do happen
here too, like those in Autumn 2000,
and more recently in Boscastle and
Carlisle. There's a tendency for people
to think 'it'll never happen to me'.
The fact is, it could, we just don't
know when. People in this country
cannot afford to be complacent about
flood risk."
Five million people in two million
properties in England and Wales live
in flood risk areas, yet despite this,
Environment Agency research indicates
that as many as two fifths (41%) of
these people are still unaware of
the threat.
On the fifth anniversary of the Autumn
2000 floods, some of the worst to
hit England and Wales, the Environment
Agency is launching an eye-catching
advertising campaign in the national
and local press to remind people that
devastating floods happen here too.
The campaign will urge people to find
out if they live or work in a flood
risk area and how to prepare in case
the worst happens this winter.
The devastating floods of Autumn
2000 caused damage to 10,000 properties
and the total financial cost was over
£1.3bn. Despite the scale of
this devastation and serious floods
in subsequent years (e.g. Carlisle
and Boscastle), more than two thirds
(69%) of those surveyed by the Environment
Agency said they were unlikely to
take measures to protect themselves
and their property - despite living
in a flood risk area.
The research also revealed that one
third (34%) of people in flood risk
areas had not checked whether their
buildings and contents insurance covers
flood damage and only 7% had found
out how to get flood warnings. Two
fifths (42%) admitted they would not
know what to do in the event of a
flood.
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