The Government has announced that £25 million in ring-fenced funding will be invested in projects that use nature to protect communities from flooding.
Natural Flood_Management - Leaky Barrier, Smithills Estate, Bolton
The Environment Agency will manage the new £25 million programme - successful projects will cover a large enough area to provide demonstrable flood risk benefits. Expressions of interest have now opened and will close on 10 November 2023. Projects will be delivered during 2024-27.
The ring-fenced funding, provided by the Government and the Environment Agency, will support natural flood management schemes across England that use techniques such as planting trees and creating wetlands to slow and store water to reduce the risk of flooding. These schemes are also proven to improve air and water quality, provide habitats for wildlife and create green spaces for communities.
The new funding builds on the £15 million natural flood management pilot programme which ran until 2021. Across the 60 pilot projects supported by this programme, the equivalent of 1.6 million cubic metres of water storage was created and 15,000 homes were better protected from flooding, while 4,000 hectares of habitat and 610 kilometres of river were improved and 100 hectares of woodland were planted.
Projects supported by the £15 million pilot include the Dorking Natural Flood Management Scheme, instigated after Pipp Brook in the Surrey Hills flooded due to its steep slopes. The partners created ‘wet woodland’ that benefits biodiversity and 30 ‘leaky barriers’ that allow water to spill into the natural floodplain, stopping too much water flooding into Dorking.
Environment Agency chair Alan Lovell said:
“In the face of a changing climate, and with the frequency and severity of flooding only likely to get worse, we need to act now.
“The pioneers who already work with nature-based solutions to achieve greater flood resilience give me hope. I am delighted this new Natural Flood Management Programme will be open to environmental groups, catchment partnerships, farmers, landowners, and local authorities to speed up more investment in natural flood management.”
Natural flood management gives us so many wider benefits and I look forward to seeing projects coming forward that also help to create habitats for wildlife, support better river quality, and sequester carbon.
Click here for guidance on submitting expressions of interest
Click here for the programme prospectus