London, United Kingdom | AFP | Muser NewsDesk

Britain is not properly prepared for the disastrous effects of climate change from severe floods to unprecedented heatwaves, a group of experts tasked with advising the government warned Wednesday.

Extreme weather events have been rising across the country in past years and “adaptation is needed now to ensure that the UK is prepared”, the experts from the Climate Change Committee said in a new report on the country’s adaptation progress.

“We know there is worse to come, and we are not ready, indeed in many areas we are not even planning to be ready,” said Julia King, a member of the upper house of parliament, the House of Lords, and chair of the committee.

Satellite Image:: Floods, UK (s. climate change effects)
This Sentinel-1 image acquired on 24 November 2024 shows the flooded areas near the towns of Langport, Bridgwater, and Yeovil in England in red tones. Credit: European Union, Copernicus Sentinel-1 imagery

The committee, which is charged with reviewing the UK’s progress on adaptation every two years, warned “there has been no change in addressing this risk with the change in government” after Labour took power from the Conservatives last year.

Britain has been battered by major storms, as well as been hit by flooding and heatwaves, with many places registering record 40-degree Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) temperatures in July 2022.

Droughts have also helped fan record numbers of wildfires — some 500 in 2022.

“The UK will experience warmer and wetter winters –- raising flood risk for properties, agriculture, and infrastructure,” the report said, adding the period “between October 2022 to March 2024 was the wettest 18-months on record for England”.

Shifts towards “drier and hotter summers will increase the intensity of summer heatwaves and droughts, with rising risks of surface water flooding”.

More than half of the UK’s top quality agricultural land and more than a third of railways and roads are also at risk of floods, the committee said.

Source: Climate Change Committee | CC BY

‘Today’s problem’

Some 6.3 million properties in England are in flood-risk zones, with the number set to rise to eight million by 2050, or one in four properties.

High temperatures will cause some 10,000 deaths a year by 2050.

“We can’t be clear enough about our message, we cannot wait to take action. This is not tomorrow’s problem. It’s today’s problem, and if we don’t do something about it, it will become tomorrow’s disaster,” King told journalists, as she presented the report.

“The threat is greatest for the most vulnerable. We do not have resilient hospitals, schools or care homes,” King added.

None of the areas evaluated by the committee, including agriculture, water supplies, transport or building satisfactorily met the standards to be labelled as “good”.

The panel made four key recommendations including improving objectives and targets, and coordination across government departments.

“Our farms are under water, food prices are going up, homes are wrecked and ordinary people count the cost,” said senior Greenpeace climate coordinator Phil Evans, urging the government to “bolster Britain’s resilience”.

Friends of the Earth said the government’s adaptation plans were “not fit for purpose” and called for “an ambitious plan that helps safeguard our homes and communities now and for the future”.

mhc/jkb/har/phz

© Agence France-Presse

Article Source:
Press Release/Material by AFP
Featured image credit: jcstudio | Freepik

Image: Illustration of krill in the Southern Ocean ecosystem
Antarctic krill lock away carbon on par with seagrass and mangrovesClimateNews

Antarctic krill lock away carbon on par with seagrass and mangroves

Tiny Antarctic krill, key players in the Southern Ocean ecosystem, are as vital for carbon storage as mangroves and seagrasses, according to a new study.…
Adrian AlexandreAdrian AlexandreSeptember 17, 2024 Full article
Graphic news (s. climate, science, research, scientists. emission targets, floods, environment)
Texas flood toll rises to 24 as rescuers search for missing childrenNews

Texas flood toll rises to 24 as rescuers search for missing children

Houston, United States | AFP Rescuers were desperately searching for at least 20 girls missing from a riverside summer camp, officials said Friday, after torrential rains…
SourceSourceJuly 5, 2025 Full article
Image: produced using the Urban Atlas 2018 dataset from the Copernicus Land Monitoring Service, shows Dublin’s urban fabric with high thematic accuracy
Image of the day: Dublin’s urban landscape captured for World Cities DayNews

Image of the day: Dublin’s urban landscape captured for World Cities Day

On World Cities Day, 31 October 2025, attention turns to Dublin, Ireland’s capital, where rapid urban growth intersects with historic streets, cultural hubs, and natural…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskOctober 31, 2025 Full article