The
2007 United Kingdom floods were a series of
destructive floods that occurred in various areas across the
country during the summer of 2007.
The most severe floods occurred across
Northern
Ireland
on 12 June; East Yorkshire and The
Midlands
on 15 June;
Yorkshire
, The Midlands, Gloucestershire
and Worcestershire on
25 June; and Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Oxfordshire, Berkshire
and South
Wales
on 28 July.
June was one of the wettest months on record in Britain (see
List of weather records).
Average rainfall across England was 140 millimetres
(5.5 in), more than double the June average. Some areas
received a month's worth of
precipitation in just 24 hours.
It was Britain's wettest May–July since records began (in 1776).
July had unusually unsettled weather and above-average rainfall
through the month, peaking on 20 July as an active frontal system
dumped more than of rain in southern England.
Civil and military authorities described the June and July rescue
efforts as the biggest in peacetime Britain. The
Environment Agency described the July
floods as critical and expected them to exceed the
1947 benchmark.
Meteorological background

Non-administrative areas affected in
June and July 2007 floods as of 24 July (marked in blue).

Administrative areas affected in June
and July 2007 floods as of 24 July (marked in blue).
June 2007 started quietly with an
anticyclone to the north of the United Kingdom
maintaining a dry, cool easterly flow. From 10 June the high
pressure began to break down as an
upper trough moved into the area,
triggering
thunderstorms that caused
flooding in Northern Ireland on 12 June.
Later that
week, a slow moving area of low
pressure from the west of Biscay moved
east across the British
Isles
. At the same time, an associated
occluded front moved into Northern England,
becoming very active as it did so with the peak rainfall on 15
June. Rainfall records were broken across the region, leading to
localised flooding. As it weakened, the front moved north into
Scotland on 16 June and left England and Wales with a very unstable
airmass, frequent heavy showers, thunderstorms and cloudy
conditions. This led to localised flash flooding and prevented
significant drying where earlier rains had fallen.
On 25 June another unseasonably low pressure (993
hPa / 29.3
inHg) depression moved across England. The associated
front settled over Eastern England and dumped more than 100 mm
(3.9 in) of rain in places. The combination of high rainfall
and high water levels from the earlier rainfall led to extensive
flooding across many parts of England and Wales, with the Midlands,
Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, South, West and East Yorkshire the
most affected. Gales along the east coast also caused storm damage.
RAF Fylingdales
on the North Yorkshire Moors
reported rainfall totals of 103 mm
(4.1 in) in 24 hours, an estimated 100 mm (3.9 in)
in Hull and 77 mm (3 in) on Emley Moor
in West Yorkshire. The average monthly total
for June for the whole UK is 72.6 mm (2.9 in).
On 27 June, the
Met Office released an
early warning of severe weather for the approaching weekend,
stating that 20 to 50 mm (–2 in) of rain could fall in
some areas, raising the possibility of more flooding within the
already saturated flood plains.
On 20 July, another active frontal system moved across Southern
England. Many places recorded a month's rainfall or more in one
day.
The
Met Office at RAF Brize
Norton
in Oxfordshire reported 126.6 mm (5 in):
a sixth of its annual rainfall. The college at
Pershore
in Worcestershire reported 142.2 mm
(5.6 in), causing the Environment Agency to issue 16 further
severe flood warnings. By 21 July, many towns and villages were
flooded, with Gloucestershire
, Worcestershire,
Warwickshire
, Wiltshire
, Oxfordshire, Berkshire, London
and South
Wales
facing the brunt of the heavy
rainfall.
Climate
researchers have suggested that the unusual weather leading to the
floods may be linked to this year's appearance of La Nina in the Pacific Ocean
, and the jet stream being
further south than normal.
Affected areas in England
England was affected by the June and July floods, with the North
badly hit in June, the West badly hit in July, and many areas hit
in both. It was England's wettest July on record.
Non-administrative counties
and
administrative
counties affected by the flooding are given below.
Bedfordshire
By 24
July, parts of Bedford
and Luton
were flooded
and one man drowned attempting to swim across the River Great Ouse
in Bedford.Parts of Felmersham and Turvey were also flooded
by water from the river
Berkshire
On 20 July, the
M4 was closed after a
landslide caused by flooding between Junctions 12 and 13
eastbound.
By 21
July, Newbury
and Maidenhead
town centres were flooded, the shopping mall in Maidenhead was closed and
parts of the Glade Festival were
flooded. Officials warned that the River Thames, the River Ock
, and its tributaries from Charney
could burst their banks. Trinity School was
badly affected by the flooding as well due to Vodafone's HQ nearby.
Vodafone's ornamental lake overflowed due to the sudden downpour
and badly damaged Trinity School's astro turf to the front of the
school as well as some damage to inside the school.
In
Reading
, rail services to the Southwest were affected and
Westbound trains from Paddington
could go no further.
The flood
waters affected the Atomic Weapons Establishment
at Burghfield
, which handles Britain's nuclear warheads,
resulting in a suspension of work for almost a year.
Buckinghamshire
On 3
June, Stoke
Goldington
suffered flash flooding affecting 25 homes.
Stoke Goldington was affected again on 3 July, with 10 houses being
flooded.
By 21 July, 70 homes and businesses were
flooded by the River
Ouse
in Buckingham
and 30 people spent the night in the town's
Radcliffe centre, but away a system of balancing lakes
prevented Milton Keynes
from suffering significantly, apart from a flash
flood of Stony
Stratford
High Street
from the River
Ouse
.
Cambridgeshire
On 24
July, four bridges in St
Neots
, Cambridgeshire were
shut when the river level peaked, and the Environment Agency warned
residents in the St Neots, Paxton
and Offords
areas to expect flooding that night.
By 25
July, parts of St Ives
were flooded. Later the same day,
the Environment Agency advised residents near the River Great
Ouse
that the peak had passed and further flooding was
unlikely.
County Durham
On 15
June, heavy rainfall caused the postponement of the fourth test
match between England and the
West Indies at the Riverside
Ground
, Chester-le-Street
. On 23 June, flash floods affected parts of
Darlington
and Stanhope Road, Northgate, St Cuthbert's Way,
Parkgate and Haughton Road were closed after water levels rose by
about 2 feet (0.6 m).It has
also lead to Woodland Road to improve its drainage to prevent such
flooding on one of the main roads out the town. On 17 July, flooding
affected Peterlee
town centre, closing shops, a McDonald's and a local school.
Cumbria
A 64 year
old man injured his head and died after trying to bail out his
flooded home in Alston,
Cumbria
.
Derbyshire
On 15
June, flooding affected properties in Coal Aston
, Calow
and
Chesterfield
town centre, and the A617 was filled with more than
of floodwater causing traffic delays. Shops affected in the
Ravenside Retail Park included
Currys,
PC World and a pet store.
Gloucestershire

Severe flooding in Tewkesbury
Gloucestershire
was the worst affected county - with both some
minor flooding in June, and major flooding in July.
On the night of Friday 20 July an
Amphicar
was used to ferry fish fingers to over 100 school children who were
stranded
[506418] by floodwater at Tewkesbury High
School.
[506419]
On 29 July,
Gloucestershire Fire and
Rescue Service attended 31,800 calls in a 48 hour period.
Normally they attend 2,000 in a year.
On 22
July, Gloucester
City A.F.C.
's Stadium was flooded. Tewkesbury
was completely cut off with no road access, parts
of the town were under around of water and flood waters entered
Tewkesbury
Abbey
for the first time in 247 years.
Tewkesbury's Mythe Water
Treatment Works
were flooded, threatening drinking water supplies
to 350,000 people, and Severn Trent
Water warned that treated water would run out by early Sunday
evening in Tewkesbury, Cheltenham
and Gloucester
. Combined military and civil emergency
services tried to stop floods reaching the Walham
electricity
substation in Gloucester
supplying half a million people.
On 23 July 50,000 Gloucestershire homes were left without
electricity after a major electricity substation in
Castle Meads, Gloucester was turned off due to
the flood.
On 24
July, the battle to save the Walham
substation
succeeded, stopping flood waters just short of entry and the Castle
Meads substation was repaired, restoring power supplies.
Channel 4's information about saving of Walham from
floods[506420]
By 24
July 420,000 people were without drinking water, including most of
the population of Gloucester
, Cheltenham
, and Tewkesbury
. Emergency services continued repair work at
the Mythe water-treatment works but
Severn
Trent Water estimated that water supplies would not be restored
for at least fourteen days. 900 drinking water
bowsers were brought in and the Army was
mobilised to distribute three million bottles of water a day and
keep the bowsers filled.
On 25 July,
Coors,
Carlsberg,
Scottish and Newcastle,
Inbev and
Greene King
brewing companies offered 23 beer tankers to help supply drinking
water. On 26 July
Severn Trent
Water organised a temporary water supply to 10,000 homes in
Tewkesbury; the water was suitable for use in toilets and for
washing, but not to drink. It was not until 7 August, 16 days after
Mythe Treatment Works stopped pumping, that the tap water for the
140,000 homes affected was considered safe as drinking water.
On 17 July, a father and his 24 year old son died from asphyxiation
due to carbon monoxide poisoning after using a petrol-powered pump
to pump water out of the unventilated Tewkesbury Rugby Football
Club cellar.
On 28 July, a body was recovered in Tewkesbury. It was that of a
19-year old Mitchell Taylor who had gone missing on 21 July.
Herefordshire
By 19
June, Herefordshire
was affected by flooding. The M50
motorway
near Ledbury
was closed on 22 July due to flooding.
More than
5,200 people in and around Bromyard
, Herefordshire
were without clean water on 22 and 23 July after
the pumps at the Whitbourne
works in Herefordshire
failed. Once supply was restored residents
were urged by
Welsh Water to boil their
tap-water until further notice.
The village of Hampton Bishop
, 3 miles (5 km) from the city of Hereford
remains surrounded and flooded by water after the
River Lugg burst its banks. On the
afternoon of 24 July the
Fire Service
began pumping flood water out of the village, but not before 130
residents were evacuated.
Houses, including the Herefordshire home of
Daily Mail writer Quentin Letts, were flooded by a torrent of
water gushing from what had previously been only a small, unnamed
brook north of Ross-on-Wye
.
Lancashire
On 12
June, Lostock
Hall
and Penwortham
near Preston
were hit by flash floods.On 3 July, heavy rain
caused flooding in Earby
and
Ribchester
, affecting homes and causing the Royal Lancashire
Show to be cancelled on 9 July. On 4 July, the
Blackburn
Mela was cancelled due to
ground conditions. On 18 July, Walton-le-Dale
near Preston was hit by flash floods.
Lincolnshire
On 25 June, the region was hit by flooding.
Emergency services
received more than 600 flood-related calls, roads were flooded in
Grantham
, Lincoln
, Louth
and Horncastle
, homes in Louth and Langworth
were flooded, the River Witham
and Brayford
Pool
overtopped, people left their homes in Wainfleet
, people were evacuated by boat from about 120
flats in Lincoln
, and homes near Market Rasen
and Scunthorpe
, North Lincolnshire
were left without power. About 400 homes
were evacuated in total.
On 26
June, North East
Lincolnshire
was affected by flooding as about 50 Grimsby
homes were evacuated by boat and the Army used to
sandbag areas in Grimsby and Cleethorpes
.
Fields across the county were waterlogged, damaging crops and up to
40% of the pea harvest. Food prices were predicted to rise.
Although
it did not formally flood, the Witham river
came within inches of doing so. If it had,
it would have created a wide lake, paralysing the county's
transport.
On 20
July, parts of Louth
and Horncastle were hit by flooding again, and the
main road in Covenham St Marys
was under several feet of water.
London
On 20
July flooding occurred in many parts of London
.
Water and power supplies were not disrupted but parts of South West
London were under of water.
Heathrow Airport
cancelled 141 flights. Two of four rail
lines in South Croydon were closed by landslips. The
London Underground was severely disrupted
and 25 stations were closed.
Nottinghamshire
On 27
June 2007, flash flooding caused extensive damage to the villages
of Lambley
, Woodborough and Burton Joyce
. Major towns were hit including Mansfield
and Hucknall
but not as severely as Lambley
. The same day, flooding occurred at Retford
and Worksop
after the River Idle
and River
Ryton
respectively overtopped their banks.
Oxfordshire
Many
rivers burst their banks, including both the Thames and the Cherwell
in Oxford
and the
Ock
in Abingdon
and the Windrush and
Evenlode
in Witney
.
By 21
July, Banbury
and Witney
were
flooded. Oxford
,
particularly Botley
, was flooded and some 300 people were
evacuated.
On 22
July, the Environment Agency warned of further flooding and 1,500
people in Abingdon
were evacuated. Forty thousand
sandbags were transported from Grantham
in Lincolnshire
to Abingdon and Oxford
.
By 23
July, Oxford
, Abingdon
, Kidlington
and Bladon
were affected; some 3,000 homes including the
home of William Morris at Kelmscott
were flooded and 600 residents were evacuated,
with many taking refuge in Oxford United Football Club's
Kassam
Stadium
.
On 24 July the Thames in Abingdon rose
3 feet (0.9 m) in less
than 12 hours to a "perilously high" level and the Thames and the
Severn were expected to rise to
20 feet (6.1 m) higher
than normal.
On 25
July residents of Osney
in west
Oxford were advised to leave their homes. About 30 people went
to the Kassam
stadium
shelter while another 250 decided to stay with
family and friends. Osney Mead substation, which supplies
power to Oxford city centre, was threatened but did not flood.
Later
that evening, the Thames breached its banks at Henley
.
Shropshire
By 19
June, rain had washed away the main road at Hampton
Loade
and the Severn Valley Railway
line from Bridgnorth
was closed after numerous landslips on the
line. Also, on 19 June/20 June, the town of
Shifnal
near Telford, parts of the town were flooded when
the stream by some of the residential
burst its banks and some of the residents blame
Severn Trent Water for opening floodgates at a
local reservoir which caused the Flash Floods. Repair costs to the
railway were estimated at £2 million.
On 26
June, a bridge collapsed on the main road into Ludlow
, severing a gas main and causing the surrounding
area to be evacuated.
On 1
July, a woman was pulled out of the River Severn at Jackfield
on the Telford and
Wrekin border near Ironbridge
. By 24 July, the UK National Ballooning
Championships in Ludlow
had been cancelled for the first time in their
32-year history.
Warwickshire
By 21
July, flooded parts of Warwickshire
included Alcester
, Stratford-upon-Avon
, Shipston on Stour
and Water
Orton
. To a lesser extent, areas of Leamington Spa
and Warwick also experienced flooding.
Several
nature reserves in the Tame
Valley, including Ladywalk
and Kingsbury Water Park
were badly affected, just as ground- and reedbed-
nesting birds were hatching young.
West Midlands
200
people were forced to leave Witton Road and Tame Road in Aston
, Birmingham
when the River
Tame flooded. Water entered the streets of Shirley
, Solihull
. As in Warwickshire, the Tame caused losses
at a nature reserve; this time RSPB Sandwell Valley
.
Wiltshire
On 20 July, Swindon had a month's rainfall in less than half a day
and more than 50 people were rescued from their flooded
homes.
Worcestershire
By 19 June,
Worcestershire was
affected by flooding.
A 68-year-old motorist died after he was
trapped in his vehicle in flood water near Pershore
whilst attempting to cross an old ford in Bow Brook
which was by then 2 m deep. The waters were still
rising, endangering the
confluence of the
River Teme and the
River Severn.
On 26 June 2007 the New Road
Ground
, home to Worcestershire County Cricket
Club, was flooded after the River Severn overtopped its banks, causing the
next day's Twenty20 match against Warwickshire to be
cancelled. On 17 July, Tenbury Wells
in Worcestershire was
flooded for the second time in three weeks after a thunderstorm caused flash flooding. By
21 July the
M5 was affected, compounded
by the closure of the
Strensham
services, and the motorway was closed, stranding hundreds in
their vehicles overnight.
By 23
July, parts of Worcestershire were under 6 feet (2 m) of water
and the Army was brought in to help emergency services supply the
inhabitants of Upton-upon-Severn
which was cut-off by floodwater.
East Riding of Yorkshire and Kingston upon Hull
Floods in Hull (25 June 2007)
On 15 June, the region was hit by flooding.
Roads including the
A63 and A1105 in
Hull
and schools in the region were closed, the Hull
Lord Mayor's Parade was cancelled, the Festival of Football was
postponed, police declared a major incident and Hessle
in Hull, on the border between one council and the other, suffered two square
miles of severe sewage-contaminated flooding.
On 25 June, the region was hit by flooding again.
Fire crews received
over 1500 calls in a 12 hour period, dozens of homes in Beverley
and about 50 people at a Hull nursing home were
evacuated, boats were used to evacuate about 90 people from
4 feet (1 m)
of floodwater in Hull's County Road North, and in Hessle a 28 year
old man died after becoming trapped in a drain. The new Hull
police station had to be vacated
because of flooding. The next day, only 12 of Hull's 88 schools
were still open, affecting 30,000 out of 38,000 Hull
schoolchildren.
By 4 July in Hull, six schools were still closed and 120 residents
in residential or nursing care had been relocated.
By 5 July, an estimated 35,000 people in streets containing 17,000
homes had been affected by flooding in Hull and by the next day
more than 10,000 homes had been evacuated.
Hull City Council estimated repair costs
at £200 million.
By 24 July, Hull City Council had checked each house in the flooded
streets and stated that 6,500 homes had been flooded.
By 27 July, £2.1 million had been allocated to Hull and £600,000 to
the East Riding for clean-up and immediate repairs, and £3.2
million to Hull and £1.5 million to the East Riding for further
repairs to the region's estimated 101 schools suffering significant
flood damage.
By 3 September, figures released by Hull City Council had been
revised upwards to 7,800 houses that had been flooded plus 1,300
businesses that were affected.
North Yorkshire
By 15
June, towns and villages in North
Yorkshire were flooded, with Knaresborough
, Harrogate
and York
being
particularly affected. In Scarborough
, the main A171 Scalby Road
flooded outside Scarborough
Hospital, and the ornamental lake at Peasholm Park overtopped
its banks and poured down Peasholm Gap into North Bay.
Near
Catterick,
North Yorkshire
, a 17 year old soldier on a training exercise
from Catterick
Garrison
died after being swept away whilst crossing
Risedale Beck, Hipswell Moor. On 23 June, flooding
affected Middlesbrough
.Pickering
was flooded after Pickering Beck overflowed its
banks. On 18 July, streams overflowed and roads
were blocked in Barton
, Gilling
West
, Melsonby
, Hartforth
, Scotch Corner
, Middleton Tyas
and Kirby Hill
after a freak rainstorm, and on 18 July 2007 a
cloud burst left parts of Filey
under
3 feet (1 m)
of water, just caused by the rain, rather than by a river bursting
its banks. Pensioners were stranded in the town's swimming
pool and rescued by lifeboat.
South Yorkshire
On 25
June, Sheffield
suffered extensive damage as the River Don over topped its banks
causing widespread flooding in the Don Valley area of the
city. A 14-year-old boy was swept away by the
swollen River
Sheaf
and a 68 year old man died after attempting to
cross a flooded road in Sheffield city centre, and lots of cattle
were washed away, and found up to three and a half miles across
fields in some areas of cultivated land. The Meadowhall
shopping centre was closed due to flooding with
some shops remaining closed downstairs until late September and
Sheffield Wednesday's
ground Hillsborough
was under 6 feet (1.8 m) of
water. A number of people had to be rescued by
RAF helicopters from buildings in the Brightside
area, whilst in the Millhouses Park area to the
southwest of the city the River Sheaf overtopped its banks causing
widespread damage. There was also widespread flooding in
Barnsley
, Doncaster
and Rotherham
with much of these towns cut off.
By 26
June, the waters in some parts of Sheffield and the surrounding
area had receded, but over 700 villagers from Catcliffe
, near Rotherham
's Ulley
reservoir
were evacuated after cracks appeared in the
dam. Emergency services from across England pumped millions
of gallons of water from the reservoir to ease the pressure on the
damaged dam, and the nearby
M1 Motorway
was closed between junctions 32 and 36 as a precaution.
On 27
June, the Army moved into the Doncaster
area after the River Don overtopped its banks
and threatened the area around what was Thorpe
Marsh Power Station
. A man was incorrectly reported missing near
the village of Adwick
le Street
near Doncaster.
West Yorkshire
On 15
June and again on 25 June, the villages of Scissett
and Clayton
West
and other parts of Kirklees
were flooded by the River Dearne
, the second time worse than the first.
On 29
June, Wakefield
was flooded. Six elderly women, including a
91-year-old, were stranded in their homes.
During the Wakefield flood, hundreds of homes were evacuated in the
Agbrigg area of Wakefield and looting was feared, but by 1 July
only four looters had been arrested in the city and were later
released on bail.
The Leeds
village of Collingham
(near Wetherby
) was particularly effected by the flooding and one
house was looted.
Affected areas in Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland was hit by flooding in the June and July floods
and it was Northern Ireland's wettest June since 1958. The
non-administrative counties and
districts affected are
given below.
County Antrim
On 12
June, the Knockmore
campus of the Lisburn
Institute
in Lisburn was
affected by flooding. The same day, parts of East Belfast
near the Antrim-Down border that were affected
included the Kings Road, Ladas Drive, Strandtown Primary School and
the Parliament Buildings
in Stormont, with
80 residents evacuated from their old people's home on the Kings
Road and Avoniel Leisure Centre opened to assist flood
victims. On 2 July, houses were flooded and two
people evacuated from their home in Cushendall
in Antrim
after the River Dall burst its banks following
heavy rain. On 16 July, parts of Belfast
International Airport
near Aldergrove in Antrim
were flooded by a freak thunderstorm leaving 10
planes unable to land, landslides closed the Antrim Coast Road near
Ballygally
, Larne, and
people were trapped in their cars in Portrush
, Coleraine.
County Down
On 15
June, there was severe flooding around Bangor
in North
Down, Saintfield
, Crossgar
and Ballynahinch
in Down and
Newtownards
and Comber
in Ards, with
shops in Crossgar
centre flooded.
County Londonderry
On 12 June,
Magherafelt
was affected by flooding.
On 16 July, roads in Aghadowey
, Coleraine
and Portstewart
, Coleraine
were rendered impassable by floodwater.
County Tyrone
On 12
June, Omagh and Dungannon were
affected by flooding, with a Dunnes
supermarket evacuated in Omagh
.
Affected areas in Scotland
Scotland was hit by flooding in June and July, with the
Lowlands most badly affected. On 12 June,
the Met Office issued torrential rain warnings for Scotland and it
was Scotland's wettest June since 1938. The
non-administrative counties
and
council areas affected
are given below.
Ayrshire and Arran
On 21
June, about 2000 homes were left without electricity and properties
were affected as flash floods hit Kilmarnock
. On 18 July, flooding affected Kilmarnock
again, the River
Irvine
burst its banks in Newmilns
, and flash floods affected roads including the
M77.
Dumfries
On 18
July, floods wrecked homes in Closeburn
, power was cut off at Eaglesfield, and roads
were closed at Moffat
and Lochmaben
.
Edinburgh and Midlothian
On 1
July rain cancelled the one-day international cricket match between
Scotland and Pakistan
in Edinburgh
and by 3 July parts of Midlothian
were flooded, with worst hit areas including
residential areas in Dalkeith
and Mayfield
.
Glasgow and Lanarkshire
On 22
June, heavy storms flooded roads and dumped debris on the railway
line in Glasgow
. The same day, torrential rain caused a
landslide just south of Lesmahagow
, closing the M74.
Moray
On 3
July a landslide caused by floodwater disrupted traffic on the A941
Rothes
to Aberlour
road in Moray
.
Ross and Cromarty
On 18
July, heavy rain caused landslips blocking the railway line between
Strathcarron
and Achnasheen
for a predicted 10 days,
Tweeddale
On 25
June rain forced the 108-year old Beltane
Festival in Peebles
to be held indoors for the first time.
Affected areas in Wales
Wales was hit by flooding in June and July, with the Eastern areas
most badly affected. It was Wales's wettest June since 1998, and
its second wettest since 1914. The
preserved counties and
principal areas affected
are given below.
Clwyd
On 26
June, roads including the A5
were impassable at Corwen
in Denbighshire, a
river overflowed at Worthenbury in Flintshire, and properties were affected in
Wrexham
. In North Wales, a man was rescued by fire
services after he was stranded on a small island in the River Dee in Llangollen
, Denbighshire. On 17 July, flash
floods after torrential rain forced the closure of a secondary
school in Prestatyn
in Denbighshire.
Dyfed
Lampeter
in Ceredigion was
affected by flooding on 11 June and then again on 15
June.
Gwent
On 26
June, properties were affected in Tintern
on the River Wye in
Monmouthshire. On 20 July, flash
floods affected parts of Newport
, Monmouthshire and
Torfaen.
Powys
In
Montgomeryshire
, ten people were taken to safety at Tregynon
and a dozen homes were flooded at Bettws
Cedewain
on 22 July, firefighters used a boat to
evacuate five people from a house near Welshpool
after they were cut off by floods on 23 July,
and the same boat was later used to rescue three people stranded in
a car on the A483. In Radnorshire
, 30 tonnes of debris and earth blocked the only
road out of Barland near Presteigne
on 23 July. In Brecknockshire
, the River Wye burst its banks in Builth
Wells
on 1 July,the saturated ground
later causing chaos at the Royal Welsh
Show in Llanelwedd
on 24 July.
South Glamorgan
On 20
July, flash floods affected the Vale of Glamorgan
, causing schools to be evacuated, roads to be
closed, and boats used to rescue people from their homes in
Barry
.
Timeline for June and July floods
Areas affected by flooding during this period were as follows (see
above for specific citations):
- England
(Buckinghamshire)
- England
(Lancashire),
- Northern Ireland
(Belfast, Cookstown, Dungannon, Lisburn,
Magherafelt, Omagh),
- Wales
(Ceredigion)
- England
(County Durham, Herefordshire, North and West
Yorkshire, Shropshire, Worcestershire),
- Northern Ireland
(Ards, Down, North Down),
- Scotland
(Ayrshire, Lanarkshire),
- Wales
(Ceredigion)
- England
(East Riding of Yorkshire, Hull,
Nottinghamshire, Shropshire, Worcestershire, South
Yorkshire),
- Scotland
(Peebles),
- Wales
(Denbighshire, Flintshire, Monmouthshire, Wrexham)
- England
(Buckinghamshire, Lancashire, West
Yorkshire),
- Northern Ireland
(Antrim),
- Scotland
(Midlothian, Moray)
- De facto gap between the June and July floods
- England
(County Durham, Cumbria, Lancashire, North
Yorkshire, Worcestershire),
- Northern Ireland
(Coleraine, Larne),
- Scotland
(Ayrshire, Dumfriesshire, Ross and
Cromarty),
- Wales
(Denbighshire)
- England
(Bedfordshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire,
Cambridgeshire, Gloucestershire, Greater London, Herefordshire,
Lincolnshire, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Wiltshire,
Worcestershire),
- Wales
(Newport,
Monmouthshire, Powys, Torfaen, Vale of Glamorgan)
Aftermath
Rescue effort
Following the flooding in late June, the rescue effort was
described by the Fire Brigades Union as the "biggest in peacetime
Britain".
Following the flooding in July, the
RAF said it is carrying out its
biggest ever peacetime rescue operation, with six Sea King helicopters from as far afield as
RAF St
Mawgan
in Cornwall
, RAF
Valley
in Anglesey
and RAF Leconfield
in the East
Riding of Yorkshire rescuing up to 120 people. An RAF
heavy lift
Chinook helicopter was also
employed to move aggregate to reinforce the banks of the
River Don. The Environment Agency
described the situation as "critical".
Health risks
The
Health Protection
Agency advised people that the risk of contracting any illness
was low but that it was best to avoid coming into direct contact
with floodwater. There were no reported cases of any
outbreaks.
Crop damage
The floods caused widespread crop damage, especially
broccoli,
carrots,
peas and
potatoes. In parts of
Lincolnshire it was estimated that 40% of the pea crop may have
been damaged, with other crops also suffering major losses. Prices
of vegetables were expected to rise in the following months.
Financial cost
Environment Agency chief
executive
Baroness Young
said that about £1bn a year was needed to improve flood defences.
The Association of British Insurers has estimated the total bill
for the June and July floods as £3 billion.
Government response
On 3 July,
Environment
Secretary Hilary Benn announced that
the Government would increase the spending on risk management and
flood defences by £200 million to £800 million by
2010-11.
During Prime Minister's Questions in the
House of
Commons
later that month, Prime Minister Gordon Brown promised £46 million in aid to
flood-hit councils and £800 million rise in annual spending on
flood protection by 2010-11, confirming Hilary Benn's
announcement. Brown also pledged to push insurance firms to
make payouts.
On 22 July, the Government convened
COBRA to co-ordinate the
response to the crisis.
Visiting Gloucestershire on 25 July, Mr. Brown praised emergency
services for their efforts, but added: "We've got to get the
supplies stepped up. We will get more tankers in, we will get more
bowsers in, we will get more regular filling of them, and at the
same time, more bottled water will be provided."
On 8 August 2007 Defra announced that
Sir Michael Pitt would
chair an independent review of the response to the flooding. On 4
September of that year the Cabinet Office website launched a
comments page to let people affected by the flooding contribute
their experiences to the review.
Sir Michael published his interim report on 17 December 2007.
Criticism of Hull Council
Hull Council was criticised for not insuring the city's libraries,
schools and other public buildings. In response, Hull Council said
that "Many councils do not have the feature in their budget" , but
other flood-hit councils were insured. It was thought that council
tax payers would be left with the bill, as emergency Government
funding would not cover it.
Criticism of Government response
In June, councillors in Hull claimed that the city was being
forgotten and had the floods occurred in the
Home Counties, help would have arrived much
more quickly. One in five homes in Hull was damaged and 90 out of
the city's 105 schools suffered some damage. Damage to the schools
alone was estimated to cost £100 million. The Bellwin Scheme for
providing aid after natural disasters was criticised as inadequate
by Hull MP
Diana Johnson. The lack of
media coverage of flooding in Kingston upon Hull led the city
council leader Carl Minns to dub Hull "the forgotten city".
In July, the Government came under mounting criticism of its
handling of the crisis, the fact that responsibilities were spread
across four departments and no single minister could be held
responsible, and the fact that the Army had not been called in to
assist.
The Observer newspaper stated
on 22 July 2007 that the Government had been warned in the spring
by the Met Office that summer flooding would be likely because the
El Niño phenomenon had weakened, but no
action was taken.
In response to the criticism, Environment Secretary Hilary Benn
said on the
BBC's
Sunday
AM programme that "This was very, very intense rainfall, with
five inches in 24 hours in some areas; even some of the best
defences are going to be overwhelmed". He praised the way the
emergency services had dealt with "unprecedented" levels of
rainfall and said he had "total confidence" in the response of the
Environment Agency.
Conservative leader David Cameron called for a public inquiry into
the flooding after visiting Witney
, the main town in his Oxfordshire
constituency.
Then
Liberal Democrat leader
Sir Menzies Campbell accused
the government of lack of preparation leading to a "summer of
suffering", and said, "With sophisticated weather forecasting as we
now have, particularly in relation to what’s happened over the
weekend, there are quite a few questions as to how it was that
flood-prevention measures were not in place or were not more
effective."
See also
References
External links