Including the closely related terms flood, and flood risk.
… important wildlife (e.g. bat roosts) have positive ecological management plans for their wildlife interest – – √ All buildings to have water saving devices – √ √ New buildings to consider greywater reuse and include where possible – √ – Develop business continuity plans for sites and public buildings that will be subject to unacceptable increases in flood risk or sea level rise. Plan of potential…
… √ – – Management of highways and other assets for climate change adaptation. E.g. Construct road surfaces with heat and flood resilient materials/designs to adapt to extreme heat and rainfall – √ √ Management of highways to deliver environment net gains, including management of verges for biodiversity value & ensure all wildlife sites are in positive conservation management. Assessment of all highways…
… property, land projects and wildlife sites MITIGATION: Energy Efficicent, low carbon buildings ADAPTATION: Resilience of our services and supporting vulnerable people NATURAL CAPITAL: Green spaces, habitats and land management, Water management Buildings and utilities MITIGATION: Low Carbon Transport ADAPTATION: Flood risk NATURAL CAPITAL: Green space, habitat and land management…
… A N D S T R A T E G Y All Strategy development and updates ADAPTATION: Flood risk, water availabiliy, Green and blue infrastructure development NATURAL CAPITAL: Green spaces, habitats and land management Planning policy and advice All All Update Procurement processes Cambridgeshire County Council Climate Change and Environment Strategy: Actio nPlan 3 of 5 Support…
… with the Environment Agency and other partners, to secure sufficient storage and flood risk management capacity for new and existing buildings and assets on the basis that weather impacts will increase due to human-made climate change – √ – Support the Environment Agency, Anglian Water and Cambridge Water to plan for the next 100 years water availability to support Cambridgeshire's people, businesses…