Executive Summary
This is a non-technical report intended for a general readership.
Weymouth already floods and is impacted by coastal erosion. With a robust prediction of an acceleration in sea level rise and more intense weather events as a result of climate change, the problems facing Weymouth will increase significantly.
Without investment in managing this flood and erosion risk, Weymouth faces increasing direct losses through flooded assets and infrastructure and indirect impacts such as a failing property market due to blight and increasing social deprivation.
Dorset Council as:
(i) The principal asset owner of harbour and seafront infrastructure
(ii) The Local Planning Authority
(iii) The defined Lead Local Flood Authority
(iv) Coast Protection Authority
now need to promote a coherent plan for the long-term sustainable flood and coastal risk management of Weymouth Harbour and the Esplanade.
This document sets out the Council’s preferred strategic approach; bringing together the findings and recommendations from numerous recent studies undertaken by both the Council and the Environment Agency.
It should be noted that this strategy excludes river and surface water flood risk.
The preferred strategic approach is to undertake a comprehensive programme of wall replacement and wall raising around both the Harbour and Esplanade frontages.
This will both reduce flood risk and replace deteriorating walls, some of which are already at the end of their design life.
It is a phased and adaptive approach which provides the opportunity to keep under review a number of factors including rates of climate change, asset deterioration and changes in spatial planning needs and requirements.
The scale of engineering works is significant and will require investment from multiple funding sources in line with Government’s Partnership Funding approach.
Investment in excess of £115million in cash cost terms will be required over the next one-hundred years.
Through economic appraisal, it can be clearly demonstrated that a robust case can be formed with Present Value Benefits totalling in excess of £750million (PVb).
The wider financial benefits to Dorset and the South West Region will be several times greater.
Economic benefit alone will return a Benefit Cost Ratio in excess of 14:1.