Grin and bear it in flooded England: But it’s sometimes too serious for that. Image: By Peter Cooper via Wikimedia Commons

Governments and insurance companies are failing to educate people on how to avoid flood risks, which are increasing as the climate warms.

LONDON, 27 August, 2017 – With flood risks and damage from extreme events increasing across Europe, homeowners in areas of greatest risk are still not taking enough measures to protect themselves.

Researchers report in the journal Risk Analysis their efforts to discover how to motivate people to keep themselves safe and protect their property from flood damage.

They say that both insurance companies and local and national governments need to do more to make people aware of the dangers.

Lead author Susanne Hanger from the Risk and Resilience Program at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria chose three countries in Europe, Austria, England and Romania, with completely different methods of dealing with flood risk, to discover whether her team could understand the trends at work. (The United Kingdom part of the study focused on attitudes within England alone, but the government measures the researchers examined come from the wider UK level.)

“A false sense of security may inadvertently increase the chance of flood damage due to an underinvestment in private measures”

Austria has a government-funded mandatory compensation scheme for flood victims, England relies entirely on private insurance, but in Romania there is no compensation scheme and very few have insurance.

One finding was that where governments or local authorities in Austria and England had built or created flood defences to protect communities, that made homeowners less likely to take action themselves. In some recent instances in both countries the rainfall extremes have been so great that even new flood defences have been overwhelmed.

The report says: “This means that a significant number of respondents who are protected by public measures such as flood dams actually feel safer, and thus tend to invest less in property-level prevention. This could be seen as a rational behaviour, but it can become problematic if the perception of safety is overstated.

“Such a ‘false sense of security’ may inadvertently increase the chance of flood damage due to an underinvestment in private measures.”

Distrust

However, the provision of public flooding defences in Romania made no difference to people’s behaviour, because they did not feel more secure. The researchers put this anomaly down to the widespread distrust of the authorities of the former Communist countries, resulting in a lack of confidence that the defences would work.

The report divided flood defences for private homes into two categories: flood defences built in during construction, and measures taken retrospectively to keep the water out. Austria did best in building flood-resistant properties in risky areas, mainly because many Austrians build their homes themselves.

In England, where developers build homes, the flood risk is largely ignored in construction. The researchers say the way to tackle this, in all countries, is to strengthen and enforce the building regulations.

One recent development in both Austria and England is an increase in premiums by insurance companies in flood-prone areas. Those paying higher prices for insurance reacted by protecting their homes more and investing in waterproof windows, sandbags and other measures. This was the case even though these precautions were not required by insurance companies.

Risk neglected

Where insurers did require individuals to take flood protection measures as part of the conditions of the policy, this was highly effective, but it was rare, and the researchers suggest this incentive should be used more widely.

Where people in all three countries had taken no action to prevent flood damage to their homes, it was usually because they did not perceive that any risk existed.

Others thought that prevention measures were not worth it because they were too expensive, and 11% said flood protection was too complicated, and did not know what to do.

The researchers conclude that much more can be done to improve the chances of people taking action to avoid flood damage. They recommend stricter planning rules, improved building regulations and more public information campaigns by both governments and insurance companies. – Climate News Network