Exclusive: Major funding package to fill gap in 拢2.3bn investment programme, after 拢600m shortfall puts 300,000 homes at risk
The government is set to bring forward a major funding package to help make up for a 拢600m black hole in its 拢2.3bn flood investment programme, 好色先生TV understands.
Whitehall sources told 好色先生TV a government announcement on bringing forward funding for flood defence schemes was 鈥渋mminent鈥, after it was criticised last week by a cross-party Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) committee report, which identified a funding gap putting 300,000 homes at potential risk of flooding.
As part of the 2013 Spending Review, the government announced a six-year capital settlement to improve flood and coastal erosion management infrastructure between 2016-2021. The government committed 拢2.3bn of funding for flood defences, but the funding relied on 拢600m of 鈥渆xternal contributions鈥 to go ahead.
To date, only 拢40m has been raised through private companies in 2014-15, with local authorities and local enterprise partnerships contributing a further 拢108m.
According to data supplied by the Environment Agency construction programme, schemes that are suffering private funding shortfalls include the flagship 拢485m Thames Estuary Phase 1 Programme, which needs 拢9.3m. 拢5.9m is still needed for the Port Clarence and Greatham South Flood Alleviation scheme in Northumbria and 拢1.1m for an upgrade to the Great Yarmouth Tidal Defences.
Supermarket chain Morrisons, which is set to benefit from construction of a 拢13.7m flood defence scheme in Skipton, Yorkshire, said that private companies had 鈥渘o part to play鈥 in financing public flood projects. A Morrisons spokesperson said: 鈥淔lood defence work requires multi-million pound investment, and responsibility for funding schemes should remain with the Environment Agency - in this case helped by the local enterprise partnership.鈥
A 拢1.1m funding shortfall for the Skipton scheme was eventually secured through the York, North Yorkshire and East Riding (YNYER) Local Enterprise Partnership鈥檚 Growth Deal, which was given extra funding from government to invest in infrastructure projects.
Mary Dhonau, chief executive of the Know Your Flood Risk campaign, said it is almost impossible to make private companies contribute towards flood defences, which can cost millions: 鈥淚t [funding for schemes] isn鈥檛 working. The proportion that local authority and regional funding is paying for schemes means that ultimately it is all coming from the same pot just by different routes.
鈥淪maller businesses aren鈥檛 in a position to put funds towards these projects.鈥
Defra cross-party committee chair Anne McIntosh said more needs to be done to encourage private-sector involvement. 鈥淓ncouraging more investment from water companies who already invest in flood defence and attracting investment from the insurance sector and pension funds could solve the issue,鈥 she said.
An Environment Agency spokesperson would not comment on funding being brought forward but said: 鈥淲e will be making record levels of investment in flood and coastal erosion risk management projects; 拢370m in 2015/16 and then the same in real terms each year, to 2020/21.鈥
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