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Tuesday, 10 February 2015 09:41

MPs query Govt plans to bolster flood defences via private funds

The House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee has today queried Government plans to attract £600 million from private funders to bolster flood defences.

 In its report on Defra Performance in 2013-14, the cross-party Committee cites low levels of private funding attracted to date as a cause for concern about ambitious future plans.

Introducing the Report, Chair of the Committee Anne McIntosh MP said:

“The Government has committed £2.3 billion in capital funding for six years’ investment aimed at protecting 300,000 properties, but that plan relies on external contributions of £600 million.”

 “We support the principle that the private sector should help to fund new flood defence schemes, but we have repeatedly expressed concern about the relatively small amounts of private sector funding secured to date under the Partnership Funding approach, with only £40 million of the £148 million secured up to 2014-15 coming from sources beyond local government.”

 “It is unclear how the £600 million target can be met, and we want Defra to demonstrate how it intends to obtain that money and to explain the impact on its investment programme if the money does not come forward.”

The Committee has also repeated its call on Government to move to a total expenditure classification for flood risk management and flags that revenue funding would benefit from a six-year funding commitment alongside capital. The Committee believes revenue and capital spending must be balanced to ensure both receive the same priority.

Defra criticised for lack of transparency

The Committee also criticises Defra for an absence of transparency in its plans to cut its budget in coming years.  Miss McIntosh said:

“The Department has not identified which specific policies and programmes will be reduced in future years, in spite of repeated requests for clarity.  Defra must be more transparent on where emergency money, such as winter floods response funding, is found.  We also need to know what the impact of cuts will be on policy delivery.”

The Committee has also identified several policy delivery failures by Defra, including delayed delivery of biodiversity offsetting proposals and slow progress on creating Marine Conservation Zones; since 127 sites were identified four years ago, only 27 have been designated.

 Poor staff morale flagged up

Poor staff morale among Defra’s civil servants is also highlighted in the report. Defra’s staff engagement score improved by 2 percentage points from 2012, but still lags 6 points below the Civil Service Average. The Committee is urging senior managers at Defra to commit to taking action to address the disappointing results.

 
Click here to download the Committee’s report in full