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Flood risk is increasing across the UK, driven by climate change, land use, and more intense rainfall events. In places like North Devon, flooding is a catchment-wide issue - shaped not just by river channels, but by how water moves across land, through soils, and into rivers over time.
While Natural Flood Management (NFM) has strong potential - slowing, storing, and filtering water in the landscape - it remains difficult to scale. Key challenges include:
As a result, flood risk management is often reactive and fragmented, and the role of landowners and catchment processes is under-recognised.
Our aim is to change this - by making flood systems visible, understandable, and collectively managed at catchment scale.
Through the Smart Biosphere, we are developing a Braunton Flood & Natural Flood Management Dashboard - a practical proof of concept designed to make flood risk, and the role of the catchment, clear and accessible.
The aim is simple: to show how rainfall moves through the catchment and translates into flood risk downstream.
The dashboard brings together four core elements:
Real-time and historic river data. We integrate Environment Agency gauge data from Braunton (Butts Bridge) at 15-minute intervals, providing a continuous picture of river levels over time.
A clear, locally relevant definition of flooding. Flooding is defined using agreed river height thresholds, creating a simple and transparent way to identify when flooding occurs.
This allows us to move from abstract risk to a shared, evidence-based understanding of actual flood events.
Simple, meaningful metrics. We translate complex data into metrics people can understand, including:
This helps communities, land managers, and decision-makers engage with the issue in a practical way.
Catchment-wide rainfall analysis. We link rainfall data across the catchment to river response downstream — showing:
This creates something that doesn’t currently exist for Braunton: a clear, integrated picture of how the catchment behaves over time.
By bringing these elements together, the dashboard creates a foundation for more effective flood management.
It enables:
A key goal of this work is to support the scaling of Natural Flood Management.
This requires more than individual projects - it requires the right system conditions:
By creating visibility and shared understanding, we can begin to build the foundation for more effective policy, funding, and long-term investment in catchment-based flood management.
This work will deliver:
We are developing and refining this approach and welcome collaboration.
If you are:
We’d love to hear from you: naturalcapital@devon.gov.uk