CaBA Conference 2015 II
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Transcript of CaBA Conference 2015 II
CaB A
tchmentased pproach Partnerships for Action
Catchment Based Approach Conference
Monday, 8th June 2015
Fishmongers’ Hall, London
CaBA15
CaB A
tchmentased pproach Partnerships for Action
Delivery in the Urban Environment
Chair – Rich Martin Defra
CaB A
tchmentased pproach Partnerships for Action
Paul Chapman Lewisham Council
Delivery in the Urban Environment
a planners perspective of balance
Climate change
Environmental issues
Localism
Today’s pressures
Viability of town centres
Public interest
Economic recession
Meeting housing needs
Long term strategies
Brownfield development
Retail ‘market forces’
Individual interest
Establish principles - engage
WORKS IN THE RIVER CHANNEL
STAGE ONE
ESTABLISH PRINCIPLES
E S T A B L I S H
PUSH FOR LARGE SCALE IMPROVEMENTS
LAND AND WATER CONSIDERED TOGETHER
ONGOING MAINTENANCE
WHO? HOW?
OPEN UP RIVER CHANNELS
PUBLIC ACCESS
SMALL SCALE WORKS ONLY POSSIBLE
SPACE OR FLOOD RISK RESTRICTIONS
LIMIT COSTS TO COUNCIL
Initial discussions - agree
EXPECTATIONS
COSTS FED INTO VIABILITY
RELATIONSHIPS
WITH EA - CONSISTENCY
STAGE TWO
INITIAL DISCUSSION PRE APPLICATION
C O N S I D E R A T I O N S
IMPORTANCE OF THE RIVER
POLICY CONTEXT
COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
ADDRESS THE RIVER
LOCAL POLICY?
DISCUSSION WITH USER GROUPS
Planning application - formalise
STAGE THREE
PLANNING APPLICATION
S U B M I T T E D I N F O R M A T I O N
RIVER IMPACT STUDY
DESIGN AND ACCESS STATEMENT
BIODIVERSITY SURVEY AND REPORT
ENVIRONMENTAL STATEMENT
FLOOD RISK ASSESSMENT
LANDSCAPE SCHEME
OPEN SPACE ASSESSMENT
DAYLIGHT/SUNLIGHT ASSESSMENT
CaB A
tchmentased pproach Partnerships for Action
Chris Coode Thames21
Delivery in the Urban Environment
Bella Davis SE Rivers Trust
&
Bella Davies Trust Director
Chris Coode Deputy Chief Executive [email protected]
A London CaBA Partnerships Smorgasbord
Introduction
• London based, river focused practical delivery organisations before CaBA
• Catchment hosts for partnership across London
• Members of the Catchment Partnerships in London
The Problem with London’s Rivers
HIGH POPULATION DENSITY
8.6
MULTIPLE LAND USE
MULTIPLE STAKEHOLDERS
MULTIPLE LANDOWNERS
UTILITY SPAGHETTI
The Project Smorgasbord
Multi-partner and Multi-funder projects Fish Passage
Improving Water Quality Delivery with Volunteers
Water Quality – Hydrodynamic Vortex Chambers
‘DOWNSTREAM DEFENDERS’
Ordnance Survey Mastermap © Crown copyright and database right 2014
Fish Passage
Hogsmill Connectivity Project
• CRF Project ~ £350k
• Aim: To make the Hogsmill River Passable for fish (multi-species)
• Objective: Address fish passage on all structures
• To date:
• 4 full weir removals
• 2 rock ramps
• 2 large pool passes
• 4 Baffle easments © OpenStreetMap contributors , CC BY-SA
Multi-partner Multi-funder Projects
£2 MILLION + MATCH
£100,000 vol time
17 PROJECTS
FIRST URBAN LPS
Catchment Partnerships in London (CPiL)
• Regional Hub to share ideas & address issues & opportunities at a pan-London scale
• 5 Management Catchments
• 14 Catchment Partnerships
• 14 Organisations
• Share ideas & experience
• Engage with organisations e.g. GLA
• Collective weight
• Topic based sub-groups
• Academic partnerships
• joint funding bids
CaB A
tchmentased pproach Partnerships for Action
Nick Paling Westcountry Rivers Trust
Delivery in the Urban Environment
Ecosystem Service benefits
in the Urban Environment Developing a common framework for delivery
& communication
A catchment provides us with many things….
But – the provision of some is reduced and needs work to improve..?
Evidence &
Knowledge
Catchment planning is also about talking to people with different needs from the environment…
Our aim should be to understand these needs, build consensus and then do something intelligent that benefits as many people as possible…
?
? ? Evidence &
Knowledge
Communication
skills
+
Healthy habitats
for wildlife
Ecosystem Services
Recreational &
cultural use
Provision of
clean water
Regulation of
water quantity
Benefits
Biodiversity
Productivity
Low cost
Ecological health
Aesthetic quality
Safety & Health
Flood prevention
High base flows
Ecosystem
WATER
LAND
BIOTA
‘Wellbeing’
+ benefits..?
‘Wellbeing’
++ benefits..?
Greenspace for
wildlife & people
Ecosystem Services
Recreational &
cultural use
Regulation of air
quality+temp
Regulation of
water quantity
Benefits
Biodiversity
Health + wellbeing
Health
Ecological health
Aesthetic quality
Safety & Health
Flood prevention
High base flows
Ecosystem
WATER
LAND
BIOTA
RURAL LANDSCAPE
URBAN LANDSCAPE
Ecosystem
WATER
LAND
BIOTA
Risks/threats
Pressure 1
Pressure 2
Pressure 3
Pressure 4 PRACTICE
INNATE PHYSICAL CHARACTER
Biodiversity
Productivity
Treatment cost
Eco. health
Aesthetics
Safety & Health
Flood risk
Base flow
Impacts
Healthy habitats
for wildlife
Ecosystem Services
Recreational &
cultural use
Provision of
clean water
Regulation of
water quantity
RURAL LANDSCAPE
URBAN LANDSCAPE
‘Wellbeing’
- benefit..?
- benefit..?
‘Wellbeing’
Where do these occur…and what is their impact
How can we reduce these risks…?
Where can we get the most
benefits..?
Ecosystem
WATER
LAND
BIOTA
RURAL LANDSCAPE
Risks/threats
Pressure 1
Pressure 2
Pressure 3
Pressure 4 PRACTICE
INNATE PHYSICAL CHARACTER
Healthy habitats
for wildlife
Ecosystem Services
Recreational &
cultural use
Provision of
clean water
Regulation of
water quantity
URBAN LANDSCAPE
- - benefit..?
‘Wellbeing’
‘Wellbeing’
Biodiversity
Productivity
Treatment cost
Eco. health
Aesthetics
Safety & Health
Flood risk
Base flow
Impacts
- benefit..?
Biodiversity
Health/wellbeing
Temperature
Health
Aesthetics
Safety & Health
Flood risk
Base flow
Impacts
Ecosystem
WATER
LAND
BIOTA
Risks/threats
Pressure 1
Pressure 2
Pressure 3
Pressure 4 PRACTICE
INNATE PHYSICAL CHARACTER
Greenspace for
wildlife & people
Ecosystem Services
Recreational &
cultural use
Regulation of air
quality+temp
Regulation of
water quantity
Where do these occur…and what is their impact
How can we reduce these risks…?
Where can we get the most
benefits..?
INTERVENTIONS TOOLBOX
Health + wellbeing
Prosperity / deprivation
Air quality
Flood risk
Recreation / leisure
Health + wellbeing
Prosperity / deprivation
Air quality
Flood risk
Recreation / leisure
Health + wellbeing
Prosperity / deprivation
Air quality
Flood risk
Recreation / leisure
CURRENT PROVISION / NEED / PRIORITY
OPPORTUNITY /
SUITABILITY
“Optioneering…?”
Priority/Opportunity/ Suitability areas
Toolbox of interventions
Greenspace/GI
SuDS
River Restoration
Waste water management
Integrated toolbox for urban catchment management
WIN-WIN “Provider saves”
Delivery Framework
REGULATION “Polluter pays”
INCENTIVES “Provider is paid”
WHERE?
WHAT?
WHO? …& who pays?
Decision- support tool
“Our aim should be to understand people’s needs, build consensus and then do something intelligent that benefits as many people as possible…”
We should therefore strive to…
• Deliver the most multi-functional (multi-benefit-realising)
interventions,
• tailored and targeted into specific & appropriate locations
• where there is both a quantifiable need/requirement for the
provision of these benefits to be increased
• and where they are best able to deliver their benefits optimally
(maximising the cost-to-benefit ratio achieved)
The aim of this project is to improve the understanding of these
elements and develop resources that enable and empower
catchment partnerships and policy-makers to build consensus
and achieve the very best possible outcomes from their work