Grimsby Telegraph

£6.7m investment in flood and coastal resilience announced

PROJECT WILL BE RUN FOR SIX YEARS BY ENVIRONMEN­T AGENCY

- By IVAN MORRIS POXTON ivan.morrispoxt­on@reachplc.com @MoPo97

A SHARE of £6.7 million worth of works will be carried out to help prevent flooding in North East Lincolnshi­re.

North East Lincolnshi­re Council and Doncaster Council are set to receive £6.7mn for investment in flood and coastal resilience from the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).

The funding is designed to support the trying out of alternativ­e solutions to flooding problems. This will include a range of sustainabl­e drainage retrofit techniques within the highway and around schools.

The project will be run for six years by the Environmen­t Agency. Anglian Water and Yorkshire Water are also partners in the scheme alongside the councils.

The investment is to be targeted specifical­ly to stop the blight of surface water flooding in urban areas where there is little possibilit­y for large scale flood storage works. It is hoped that the sustainabl­e retrofit drainage systems to be trialed will not only increase reduce the effect of flooding, but also enhance the environmen­t.

Stewart Swinburn, North East Lincolnshi­re Council’s portfolio holder for environmen­t and transport, said: “We’re delighted to have been awarded this funding from DEFRA to help create and deliver a programme where we can reduce the likelihood and consequenc­es of flooding in the area. We will also be working with local schools in the area to provide curriculum approved lessons around the water cycle, sustainabi­lity and water management.

“I look forward to watching this project develop over the coming years.” In North East Lincolnshi­re, the council and its delivery partner Equans will work with Anglian Water on methods to be trialed.

“We are thrilled this funding is coming to North East Lincolnshi­re,” said Jonathan Glerum, Anglian Water’s regional flood risk manager. “It is the cumulation of a number of years’ hard work with our partners at the council, and I am very much looking forward to seeing the difference this project will make to how we manage flood risk and enhance the environmen­t collaborat­ively across the council’s area.”

Flooding and seaside reclaiming of land is a significan­t issue in northern Lincolnshi­re. According to an interactiv­e map by Climate Central unveiled earlier this year, sea level rises could lead to parts of Grimsby and Cleethorpe­s being wiped out by 2090. This is also far from the only flood-related major investment of late.

South Ferriby flood defences costing £14mn, including 13-metre long flood gates that can be slid across the A1077 in just 15 minutes, were completed in 2021. The village suffered in 2013 the worst tidal surge in living memory, costing an estimated £50bn in damage.

And at the start of November, North East Lincolnshi­re Council’s planning committee heard behind closed doors a presentati­on by the Environmen­t Agency setting out in more detail plans for multi-million pound flood defences covering Immingham and Stallingbo­rough towards Grimsby. In 2019, Stallingbo­rough experience­d severe flooding when between 50 and 60mm of rainfall was recorded in less than 24 hours across northern Lincolnshi­re.

Andy Smith, Equans project lead on the North East Lincolnshi­re scheme, said of the £6.7mn shared scheme with Doncaster Council: “We are excited to be working on this vital project to help become more resilient to the effects of flooding and climate change within our local area. The lessons we will gather from this six-year programme will be used to help inform future approaches for investment in flood and coastal risk management.”

 ?? IMAGE: DONNA CLIFFORD ?? A flashback to when water flooded the pavement at the junction of Grimsby’s Stanley Street and Tunnard Street
IMAGE: DONNA CLIFFORD A flashback to when water flooded the pavement at the junction of Grimsby’s Stanley Street and Tunnard Street

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom