Thirty percent of UK commercial premises at risk of flooding
Climate risk adds a new dimension to growing commercial risk when it comes to flooding of commercial premises. More heavy summer downpours with flash floods are putting business operations at risk across the UK, with all the disruption that entails. These long-tail risks occurring in random locations are hard to predict, leaving many commercial operations unprotected.
According to Aviva data reported by webwire.com, July and August are now the most likely months for these random flood events to occur, and these are reflected in their claims for commercial premises flooding and the consequent business disruption.
Extreme weather events
Aviva maintains that almost one in three commercial properties in the UK are at some risk of flooding, according to their report. The evidence is backed by their claims from July 2021 which saw the highest number of commercial flood claims in one month, double their previous high.
Feed back from surveys of small and medium size enterprises (SMEs) show that over half (around 57%) believe that climate change is going to have some impact on their business over a 10 year period – extreme heat and flooding are their biggest concerns.
However, Aviva reckon that despite the risk, and concerns about it, few businesses, only around 20%, have actually put in place a continuity plan in case the worst should happen and their operations are brought to a standstill due to flooding.
Business advice and planning
Given its concerns, Aviva has launched a partnership with private advisory, Enterprise Nation, an organisation which provides a UK-wide network, a community of small businesses and business advisers that exist to give trusted business support. British businesses need this kind of support as they are being put at risk from extreme weather events. Their lack of awareness and preparedness for the risk is putting their survival at risk thinks Aviva.
A YouGov survey conducted for Aviva, which forms the basis of its ‘Building Future Communities’ report, found that 57% of SMEs believe climate change will impact their business in the next ten years, and a further 25% believe it will affect their livelihood within the next year. However, at lease 17% of the respondents said they were not concerned at all.
Further research by Aviva, looking into how flood risk areas and map data, shows that almost one in three (30%) commercial properties are at risk of some form of flooding. Aviva’s analysis of its claims records shows that there is an even more worrying picture, with its July 2021 claims its highest on record for commercial flood claims, double its previous high for January 2016.
Most recent data on weather shows that patterns are shifting with high risk flooding events no longer confined to winter months, but now prevalent in summer, with July and August most at risk.
The research shows that many businesses lack the information they need to ascertain the risk to their businesses, which is preventing them taking action such as planning flood mitigation strategies.
Aviva thinks its “Building Future Communities” report will help businesses understand the risks and meet the challenges they face from extreme weather. The report outlines key steps they can take now to minimise these risks.
Enterprise Nation and Aviva are to launch a ‘Plan it with Purpose’ free educational hub, which provides free online events, advice and educational resources to SMEs on a range of sustainability issues, including an educational series on climate resilience.
Nick Major, MD, commercial lines, General Insurance at Aviva, said;
“Unsurprisingly, over the past year businesses have been focused on dealing with the impacts of Covid and Brexit. However, as our data shows, climate change is already having devastating impacts here in the UK, and extreme weather is set to become more commonplace in future.
“Businesses frequently bear the brunt of this damage, but are often overlooked when it comes to prevention and protection. Planning regulations often prioritise homes over businesses, which leaves many SMEs exposed to flooding and other climate risks.
“SMEs account for over 99% of UK enterprises5, and they are vital to the wellbeing and recovery of local communities – particularly after extreme weather – offering support, jobs and stability. It’s crucial, therefore, that businesses receive more support with better insight into the risks they face to help them safeguard their livelihoods from climate change.
“In our ‘Building Future Communities’ report, we call for actions to be taken to ensure that SMEs are sufficiently protected from the impacts of extreme weather. By partnering with Enterprise Nation, we can help provide advice and support to SMEs, enabling them to become more climate-resilient.
“But we’re also calling for action to be taken across industries and Government, to ensure that businesses, from design to construction, are both sustainable and resilient to the changes that climate change will bring, and that they are built to the right standards, in the right places.”
“Climate change is already having devastating impacts here in the UK, and extreme weather is set to become more commonplace in future. Businesses frequently bear the brunt of this damage, but are often overlooked when it comes to prevention and protection.” – Nick Major, MD, commercial lines, General Insurance at Aviva
Excess heat is also a concern
While Aviva says that flood risk is the predominant concern, they believe that climate change will increasingly bring other risks including excess heat and storms. Their survey identifies that 42% of respondents are also worried about excess heat and 35% are worried about violent storms.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Thirty percent of UK commercial premises at risk of flooding | LandlordZONE.
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Labour would fix the housing crisis?
In her Labour Party Conference Speech, Lucy Powell, Shadow Secretary of State for Housing, said that she sees housing as very much a public health issue.
Lucy wants to tackle what she perceives as issues of quality, affordability and security in private rentals and end No-Fault Evictions.
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Pay Less Property Tax presentation by Mark Smith (Barrister-At-Law) – Titans event 14th October
Hon. Legal Counsel, Mark Smith, Head of Chambers at Cotswold Barristers will be presenting, ‘Are you paying too much tax on your property rental business? Business structures for Landlords’ at the next TITANS meeting (re-branded J6 event) run from the Crowne Plaza in Gerrards cross on Thursday the 14th of October.
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WARNING: Plans to nationalise Berlin rental market to have ‘global effect’
Berliners have voted to forcibly buy housing owned by large property companies in the German capital in a bid to combat rising rents.
While delegates at the Labour conference have been debating rent controls in Brighton, Berlin tried and failed to establish a rent cap in January 2020 – but this step is an even more dramatic approach.
If approved, Berliners’ vote to take public ownership of private property could have ‘worldwide ramifications’ and set a precedent for similar initiatives worldwide.
The non-binding referendum, which got 56% support, would mean the local government would buy 11% of the city’s properties to make housing more affordable by transferring about 226,000 apartments into public hands.
The proposal applies to property companies that have more than 3,000 rental units, however Deutsche Wohnen, which owns more than 100,000 units in the city, says it doesn’t expect the transfer will happen, and that such a move would be ‘unconstitutional’.
Tied up
The firm says: “Funds and resources would be tied up for decades in compensation payments and thus be lost to the construction of urgently needed housing and further investments in the infrastructure of the growing city.”
More than 84% of the population of Berlin are tenants and are paid an average salary lower than other major cities, yet rental prices have increased markedly in recent years.
The neighbourhood of Mitte is the second most unaffordable neighbourhood in Germany, according to estate agent Homeday.de, where someone earning the average salary would need to spend 61% of their net income on rent.
It says a rental burden of more than 40% of the household income is defined as financial overload, meaning that the average earner is priced out of 17 out of 19 Berlin neighbourhoods.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – WARNING: Plans to nationalise Berlin rental market to have ‘global effect’ | LandlordZONE.
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Lobby group: ‘Tenants should be paid £1,700 to move out when served no-fault notice’
Tenants should be able to challenge Section 21 notices and get compensation if they’re forced to move home for reasons outside their control, says Generation Rent.
The campaign group is calling for measures to challenge ‘mandatory’ evictions when a landlord wants to sell and to help tenants fund the £1,709 that it costs an average household to move home.
Generation Rent says Section 21 is used by landlords when selling up, who can also abuse it to re-let at a higher rent, or to avoid making repairs.
40,000 households
Its research shows that more than 40,000 households in England have been threatened with homelessness by landlords using no-fault eviction grounds in the two years since the government promised to abolish them.
Between April 2019 and March 2021, councils dealt with 557,030 cases of homelessness, of which 91,710 were private tenants facing eviction. Of these, 44,040 households were facing eviction due to their landlord selling up, re-letting or evicting following a complaint by the tenant – representing 0.9% of England’s 4.7m private renter households.
The Prime Minister’s local borough of Hillingdon has the second worst rate in the country, with 29 in every 1,000 private renter households having faced homelessness after complaining about disrepair, or after their landlord decided to sell or re-let their home.
Alicia Kennedy, director of Generation Rent (pictured), says: “Being forced to move for reasons outside your control creates unimaginable stress, uproots you from your community and disrupts children’s education. Right now, landlords need no reason to inflict this on their tenants.
“The government has rightly committed to the abolition of Section 21 evictions, but this is too late for the thousands of renters who have faced homelessness while the reforms have been delayed.”
Read more about Section 21 eviction notices.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Lobby group: ‘Tenants should be paid £1,700 to move out when served no-fault notice’ | LandlordZONE.
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Boris U-TURN – New Planning Reforms ditched!
New planning reforms set in motion by Robert Jenrick, Boris Johnson and Dominic Cummings are to be scrapped.
Boris Johnson draws property industry’s ire over watered-down planning reforms. Plans aimed to curb councils’ power to oppose developments and speed up delivery of new homes in England scrapped.
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BTL product choice is still increasing
There are now more Buy-to-let (BTL) products available today than on offer in March 2020, before the impact of the pandemic was felt across the sector, according to the latest data from Moneyfacts.co.uk.
– September started with 2,968 products on offer in the BTL sector
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Labour conference: big on landlord bashing, thin on new ideas for rental sector
Shadow housing minister Lucy Powell (pictured) set out Labour’s stall at its conference in Brighton yesterday, presenting it as the ‘party of home owners and tenants’ but proffering few ideas for the private rented sector (PRS).
Much of the speech was spent attacking the Conservative’s track record within the PRS, its house-building efforts, withdrawn Green Homes Grant scheme and the ongoing fire safety and leasehold scandals.
This included fierce criticism of fast-rising house prices and the dwindling number of affordable homes available to first time buyers, the reduction council houses but also the expansion of what she called an ‘insecure’ rental sector.
“I see no contradiction in us also promoting home-ownership – not for more landlords or second homes, but for ordinary working people – nurses, electricians, delivery drivers and care workers – currently priced out,” she said.
New policy?
The only hints of new policy from Powell came half way through her speech, during which she said a Labour government would link housing costs to wages and “tackle the thorny issues of quality, affordability and security in private rentals”.
But Powell made it abundantly clear Labour was no friend of landlords, portraying the Conservatives as treating “housing as a commodity: to be traded, profited from, part of an investment portfolio, a pension pot, not as the bedrock of stable lives and life chances”.
Powell revealed few initiatives during her speech, save for a plan to launch a ‘great housing challenge’ to learn from Labour councils, mayors and the Welsh government in order to “develop a housing plan together”.
She also took a shot at the new housing secretary, saying: “I hear we have Michael Gove coming to the rescue! Do me a favour. Ask the teachers! Less a knight in shining armour, a wrecking ball more like!”.
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