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The future of sustainable flood protection

ICPDR releases the Flood Action Programme to help Danube Basin communities reduce the risk of flood damages.

 

Credit: ICPDR/Igor Liska

Bratislava declares a state of emergency as flood-waters submerge the city in 2002. Catastrophic floods force residents to evacuate across the basin.

Rising dangers.
The Communication on Flood Risk Management issued recently by the European Commission indicated that between 1998 and 2002, Europe suffered over 100 damaging floods, including the catastrophic floods along the Danube and Elbe rivers in 2002. Since 1998, floods have caused 700 fatalities, the displacement of about half a million people, and at least 25 billion Euros in insured economic losses. More-over, floods also cause severe environmental impacts by inundation of areas containing toxic or hazardous substances.

As a response to these dangers, the ICPDR established the Flood Protection Expert Group in 2002 to prepare the Action Programme on Sustainable Flood Protection in the Danube River Basin.

 

Targeting the high-water mark.
The overall goal of the action programme is to achieve a long-term and sustainable approach to managingthe risk of floods, while encouraging conservation and improvement of water-related ecosystems. It describes the principles, targets and measures concerning flood protection on a basin-wide level and guides the preparation of action plans for flood protection on a sub-basin level. Considering the damage floods cause, a formal agreement on a joint programme is of supreme importance.

“The Action Programme sets very important targets and specifies measures to manage the growing flood risks on local, regional, sub-basin and basin-wide level,” says Sandor Toth, chairman of ICPDR’s Flood Prevention Expert Group. The programme covers the improvement of early flood warning and forecast, as well as the assessment of flood-prone areas and evaluation of flood risks.

 

A swell of success.
The key to success in preventing flood damage will be to link national and regional systems, and the programme calls for the development of a basin-wide Blöchearly warning system by the end of 2006 and sub-basin action plans by 2009. “Since successful and effective flood risk management is the prerequisite of sustainable regional development, I am convinced that by the implementation of this Action Programme the whole Danube River Basin will benefit”, says Toth.

 

For more information: www.europa.eu.int/comm/environment/water/index.html

 

PREVENTION AND PROTECTION - THE EUROPEAN DIMENSION

 

After the disasters of the 2002 floods, all of Europe is taking action against floods

·        In 2003, the EU created a comprehensive EU document on best practices in flood prevention and protection.

·        In July 2004, the European Commission presented its Communication ‘Flood Risk Management’, analysing causes and impacts and proposing concerted European action. Such action should build on experience and ongoing activities such as the Flood Action Plans for the Danube, Rhine, Elbe and Oder basins.

·        In October 2004, the EU Environment Ministers unanimously supported the analysis of the Flood Risk Communication and called for the European Commission to draft a legislative proposal.

The shape of future EU flood actions

·        A proposed EU Floods Directive will provide for mandatory cooperation within river basins and across borders, for risk zone mapping and for flood action plans as the operative instrument for flood prevention and flood protection, using information from citizens, stakeholders and NGOs. The legislative proposal is expected in autumn 2005, and implementation will be guided, together with that of the Water Framework Directive, by EU Water Directors.

·        EU funding instruments such as Structural and Cohesion Funds, LIFE, but also the revised EU Agricultural Policy will provide financial support, from training and information to operational measures for prevention and protection.

Helmut Blöch

 

Igor Liška
is the technical expert for water quality
and water management at the ICPDR Secretariat.