6 resultsfor “urban flooding risk in England”
Urban areas host 80% of England’s homes at high risk of flooding, study finds
England. The government’s climate advisers warned in a [major report](https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/may/20/uk-built-for-climate-that-no-longer-exists-and-needs-urgent-changes-to-survive-global-heating-report-warns) that drought would become more frequent as a result of global heating and more reservoirs must also be built to avoid
England, with the highest proportion of urban residents – 98.2% – living in neighbourhoods with critically low access to trees. The research, which covered the whole of the UK, found a significant north-south divide, with
England primary in Barnet, north [London](https://www.theguardian.com/uk/london), used to flood so severely it was often unusable. “It would get so bad that the children couldn’t be dismissed from the playground,” says Maccie
England, as part of the Ealing Beaver Project. The beavers that were released are part of an unlikely effort to bring back a vanished species and help Britain adapt to a very modern problem: climate
urban divide, but by extreme environmental disparities within towns and cities, and new “loopholes” for developers will exacerbate it, it says. Biodiversity net gain rules, introduced in 2024, made it mandatory in England for most