Risk and Resilience: Annual Statement Debate

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Department: Cabinet Office

Risk and Resilience: Annual Statement

Alistair Strathern Excerpts
Monday 4th December 2023

(1 year ago)

Commons Chamber
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Oliver Dowden Portrait The Deputy Prime Minister
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My hon. Friend speaks from experience, having previously worked in the Cabinet Office, and he is absolutely right to highlight the importance of exercising. Indeed, we conducted Exercise Mighty Oak, a major national exercising programme in relation to power outages, earlier this year. We are currently developing the forward programme for national exercises, and I will be able to provide an update shortly on our progress. Indeed, it forms part of the national resilience academy to train people in that kind of exercising.

Alistair Strathern Portrait Alistair Strathern (Mid Bedfordshire) (Lab)
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One big driver of flooding risk from our waterways is raw sewage pollution, which has not improved since 2016. When I was starting out as a maths teacher, it did not take me long to realise that letting some of my classes mark their own homework was quite a naive approach and did not drive performance. When will the Government learn the same lesson and recognise that the current self-reporting regime for raw sewage discharge simply is not working?

Oliver Dowden Portrait The Deputy Prime Minister
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The Government have introduced an unprecedented package to address sewage discharge. On resilience more widely, we have put £150 million into the flood and coastal resilience innovation programme to ensure that, as we develop flood defences, we also look at how we protect against, for example, coastal erosion and wider risks to seawater.