Over 6M homes at risk of flooding in England, says Environment Agency

More than 6 million homes in England are at risk of flooding under the latest climate projections, a study by the Environment Agency has found, Report informs via The Guardian.

This could rise to 8m – or one in four properties – by 2050, the study said.

New modeling shows the number of homes expected to flood has risen much higher than previously expected.

In England, 6.3 million properties are in areas at risk of flooding from one or a combination of rivers, the sea and surface water. Of these, 4.6 million properties are in areas at risk of flooding from surface water. This is when extreme rainfall causes drainage systems to become overwhelmed, which can cause dangerous flash flooding. This projection is a 43% increase on the Environment Agency’s previous assessment.

There are 2.4 million properties in areas at risk of flooding from rivers and the sea. The modeling found an 88% increase in the number of properties at the highest levels of risk, where an area has a greater than one in 30 chance of flooding in any given year.

Earlier this month, Storm Darragh caused much damage across the UK. Two people died in the deluge and tens of thousands faced many days without power. Trains were disrupted and many homes and businesses flooded as the rainfall caused devastating damage.

Flood protection plans have been cut by 40% in recent years because of a lack of investment in defenses, with a quarter of major projects abandoned, and campaigners have called for the government to strengthen its climate plans.

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