Findings highlight ageing flood and drainage infrastructure
The Island could lose approaching £3billion in economic damage from surface flooding over the next century.
A national Flooding Strategy report warns that the number of properties at risk from coastal flooding is expected to increase nearly four times in that period, due to climate change.
It warns that flooding cannot be eliminated entirely, but it can be cut down
the report looks at where the Island is and what's to be done in terms of flood defences covers the next decade, but it also refers ahead a hundred years.
Much of this report underlines what's already known; that many of our coastal defences, river assets and drainage infrastructure are ageing.
Over the next 10 years national and local flood risk assessments will be studied, updated and action plans developed.
To underline the destructive power of flood waters, reference is made to Storm Desmond in 2015; the deluge that inundated the Laxey River and destroyed the bridge there, costing an estimated £9-15million.
The report will be laid before Tynwald at the January sitting.
Tynwald approves changes to sitting schedule, including half-term breaks and revised start dates
Plea to Manx parents to check meningitis vaccination status
Bus dispute ‘a considerable way apart’ as talks continue, says infrastructure minister
Noble's bed capacity exceeding industry-recognised 'safe levels'