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Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Date post: 07-Jul-2015
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JBA Consulting joined Engineers Ireland and fellow flood professionals during Engineers Week 2014 to reflect on current and future flooding events and to discuss future protection plans.
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Flood Risk Management Guidelines A look back 4 years on Jonathan Cooper Managing Director JBA Ireland
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Page 1: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Flood Risk Management Guidelines A look back 4 years on

Jonathan Cooper

Managing Director JBA Ireland

Page 2: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

The Documents

Guidelines for Planning Authorities Technical Appendices

Page 3: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

What did the guidelines set out to achieve

• Reducing future risk by better planning

• Managing existing risk through land use change

• Planning led decisions based on understanding risk

• Sustainable place making through a sequential approach to flood risk

C

O

N

S

E

Q

U

E

N

C

E

PROBABILITY

New Development

Climate Change

Asset Deterioration

Flood Alleviation Schemes.

RISK

Page 4: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

How did the guidelines deliver this?

• Justification Test for Spatial Planning

• Justification Test for Development Management

• 3 levels of Flood Risk Assessment over 3 stages

Page 5: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Scales and Stages of Flood Risk Assessments

Page 6: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Flood Zones

Page 7: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Definition of Flood Zones

Zone Description

Zone A

High probability of

flooding.

This zone defines areas with the highest risk of

flooding from rivers (i.e. more than 1% probability

or more than 1 in 100) and the coast (i.e. more

than 0.5% probability or more than 1 in 200).

Zone B

Moderate probability

of flooding.

This zone defines areas with a moderate risk of

flooding from rivers (i.e. 0.1% to 1% probability or

between 1 in 100 and 1 in 1000) and the coast

(i.e. 0.1% to 0.5% probability or between 1 in 200

and 1 in 1000).

Zone C

Low probability of

flooding.

This zone defines areas with a low risk of

flooding from rivers and the coast (i.e. less than

0.1% probability or less than 1 in 1000).

Page 8: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Classification of vulnerability of development

Vulnerability Class Land use and types of development include:

Highly vulnerable development

(including essential infrastructure)

Garda, ambulance and fire stations

Hospitals and schools;

Dwelling houses, student halls of residence and

hostels.

Less vulnerable development Buildings used for: retail, leisure, warehousing,

commercial, industrial and non-residential

institutions;

Land and building used for agriculture and

forestry;

Local transport infrastructure.

Water-compatible development Flood control infrastructure;

Amenity open space, outdoor sports and

recreation and essential facilities such as

changing rooms;

Lifeguard and coastguard stations.

Page 9: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Sequential Approach using probability and consequence

Page 10: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Justification Test – How has it been implemented Strategic Flood Risk Assessments

• SFRAs are the most important step in these guidelines

• Initially there was reticence in local planning depts

• Lack of flood maps/skills

• Kicking the can down the “planning” road

• Cl 5.27 made it clear that SFRA was needed

• Generally quality of SFRAs is approaching best practice examples;

http://www.clonmelbc.ie/media/FINAL%20SFRA.pdf

Page 11: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Outcomes from SFRAs

• Improving and providing flood zone maps

• PFRA outlines not adequate on their own

• Now dezoning via the JT has been straightforward

• Nearly full alignment of flood risk and land use zoning

Page 12: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Where the SFRA can add value

• Improve quality of FRAs locally

• Capacity building

• Setting measurable FRM objectives

• Climate change adaptation

• Scoping out issues with residual risks and how these should be managed

• More complete review of all flood risk sources

Page 13: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Current issues in application of guidelines

• How to fully embed SFRA into Local Plan and show flood zone maps

• Extant permissions and protecting value of land in FZ

• FRAs for infrastructure

• Still engineering a solution

– Flood Zone A can’t become Flood Zone C

– Loss of floodplain must be compensated for

• JT can’t be applied outside of the settlement boundary!!

• All development should have a FRA

Page 14: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Overview of the process

• Engineering function in councils overwhelmed by requests to comment on Planning Applications

• Planners should be able to screen more PAs

• Standard of FRA’s are poor, and not provided with application

• RFIs need to be pragmatic

• Council planners are now confident in saying no

• ABP Inspector generally well versed in Guidelines

• Little work for QC’s?

Page 15: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

4 years on – Economic outlook is better, but the climate is looking more uncertain

Page 16: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Regeneration and flood risk

Kings Island

Page 17: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Flood risk brings tough choices or compromises for our communities

Some flooded Limerick homes ‘to be rebuilt on

higher ground’

Ministers visit residents of flood-hit St Mary’s

Park to assess damage

Page 18: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Challenges from a buoyant development market

• Guidelines are robust and have helped shaped sustainable development plans

• Extant permissions and previous value of land

• Developers still trying to engineer our way out

• Building in areas of residual risk

• Capacity in council departments and quality of consultants

Page 19: Examining the Planning and Flood Risk Management Guidelines - four years on

Considerations for further thought

• Reporting and monitoring of flood risk metrics for new development

• Case study reviews involving ABP

• Further capacity building in local authorities

• Review of Technical Appendices on the foot of issue of CFRAM maps and national debate over response to the winter storms of 2014

• Extend guidance on SFRAs to integrate climate change adaptation plans

• Model data usage and management


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