National Flood Advisory Service to be Established
A National Flood Advisory Service will be established to improve Scotland’s flood resilience and embed best practice on a nationwide scale.
The service is one of the actions in Scotland’s first National Flood Resilience Strategy, published today. It will provide support and advice on building flood resilience to delivery partners and communities, and provide the governance framework for progressing high value flood actions such as flood protection schemes.
Other key actions include:
- work to improve our understanding of how urban and rural landscapes can be adapted for flood mitigation
- support for a broader range of flood actions including smaller flood protection schemes and property level flood resilience
- improvements to how data is used to inform decision making and raise community awareness of current and future flood exposure.
The scale of the challenge Scotland faces in response to climate change means that actions within the strategy are designed to extend beyond “fixing” individual flooding problems to creating flood resilient places and communities.
An additional £15 million has been set aside in the draft 2025-2026 Scottish Budget to support the delivery of the Strategy, wider flooding resilience and coastal adaptation work.
Flooding is a growing reality in Scotland, with heavier rain, higher sea levels, and more storms.
— Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) (@ScottishEPA) December 17, 2024
Stay prepared this winter by checking the Scottish Flood Forecast, signing up to Floodline and check @SEPAFlood for updates.
Visit https://t.co/dXZ7m4s6jM to find out more. pic.twitter.com/z90HYspV7y
The Strategy will be delivered via an implementation plan that will take forward policy development for six priority action areas, starting with the establishment of the Flood Advisory Service.
Background
- The National Flood Resilience Strategy builds on existing Scottish Government support for flood resilience and strong partnership working including working with, amongst others, SEPA, local authorities, Scottish Water and NatureScot.
- The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) also publishes its Potentially Vulnerable Area (PVA) consultation digest today
- Since 2008, the Scottish Government has made available £42 million per year to local authorities to invest in flood risk management actions – a commitment that is in place until 2026.
- The 2020 Programme for Government committed an additional £150 million over the course of this Parliament for flood risk management actions.
- The Strategy is part of The Scottish National Adaptation Plan 2024-2029
- More information on the National Flood Advisory Service will be made available in due course