25 Year Environment Plan: Commit to specific plans on SuDS
The Government launched its 25 year Environment Plan with much fanfare last month seeking to prove that it can talk about other things than Brexit. We review what it means for flood management and specifically prospects for policy changes on sustainable drainage (SuDS.)The lofty aim of the Environment plan is to set out goals for improvement within a generation. The focus is on reducing risk of harm to people, the environment and the economy from natural hazards including flooding, drought and coastal erosion by:
- Access to better information to assess any risks posed by flooding and coastal erosion
- bringing the public, private and third sectors together to work with communities and individuals to reduce risk
- ensuring decisions on land use, including development, reflect the level of current and future flood risk
- ensuring interruptions to water supplies are minimised during prolonged dry weather and drought
- boosting the long-term resilience of our homes, businesses and infrastructure – specific support for property-level improvements like flood barriers, non-return valves, air brick covers and flood-resilient coatings on walls.
Flood risk and coastal erosion
The government has already made financial commitments to improving flood defences, with £2.6bn due to be invested between 2015 and 2021. However, the plan outlines some of the other measures the government has in store:- Updating the national flood and coastal erosion risk management strategy and strengthen joint delivery across organisations
- Examining current partnership arrangements and seek to more private sector funding
- Boost the Environment Agency’s role as a statutory planning consultee so that new developments are flood resilient and do not increase flood risk
- Strengthening relevant protections within the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF)
Increasing SuDS uptake
Michael Gove says that in the long term, the Government will consider changes to the NPPF and building regulations to boost the uptake of SUDS, and that Defra will work with the Ministry of Housing, Communities, and Local Government to deliver on this.Key actions include:- Amending planning practice guidance to clarify construction and ongoing maintenance arrangements for SuDS in new developments. These include “tightening links with planning guidance for water quality and biodiversity”.
- Considering changes to the NPPF and building regulations, to encourage the use of SuDS in the longer term
- Improving existing arrangements for managing surface water flooding, involving lead local flood authorities, water and sewerage companies, highways authorities regulators and other risk management authorities









