From The Guardian UK: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/mar/02/britain-faces-more-floods-and-droughts
Environment Agency calls for urgent action to prepare for extreme weather events
Robin McKie
The Observer, Saturday 2 March 2013
Britain faces increasingly extreme weather conditions and urgently needs to improve its anti-flood defences and preparations for severe drought, says the Environment Agency.
Its stark conclusion follows detailed analysis of weather patterns, river levels and flooding events in 2012, which revealed that some areas suffered record levels of drought before facing some of the worst flooding ever.
Last year, flooding was recorded on 20% of days and drought on 25% of days, with rivers such as the Tyne, Ouse and Tone going from their record lowest flows to record highest in four months.
“It was an extraordinary year and it serves as a warning for the country that we face a future in which there are likely to be more and more extreme weather events,” said Lord (Chris) Smith, the agency’s chairman. “We need, very urgently, to prepare plans to deal with these extremes.”
In early 2012, the Environment Agency issued a series of warnings about desperately low levels in rivers, reservoirs and groundwater aquifers. The previous year was one of the driest on record, and reservoirs and boreholes were at record lows for that time of year. In winter, they should have been full and the agency warned that only a downpour lasting weeks could avert a serious summer drought.
Britain got its downpour, but it lasted months, with previously parched fields turned into quagmires and more than 8,000 homes flooded. “We saw environmental damage caused by rivers with significantly reduced flows, hosepipe bans affecting millions and farmers and businesses left unable to take water from rivers,” said Smith. “But we also saw the wettest year on record in England.”
Continue reading at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/mar/02/britain-faces-more-floods-and-droughts
