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EU ponders paying Britain up to 145 million euros in flood damage aid

by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Aug 21, 2007
The European Commission is considering a British request for a multi-million-euro payout to help with reconstruction after flooding in central and western England early this summer, a spokeswoman said Tuesday.

The British government application for funding from the EU's Solidarity Fund puts the total cost of the flood damage at 4.33 billion euros (5.83 billion dollars), Commission spokeswoman Katharina von Schnurbein said.

That amount exceeds the 3.26 billion threshold required to draw from the EU fund and, if verified by the Commission, could translate into a maximum payout of 145 million euros, she said.

"This is the maximum because now what the Commission will have to do, together with the UK authorities... is to assess whether the damage is actually that high or whether it is slightly lower because now it has been estimated on the basis of satellite images and there might be some costs in there which in the end which will not be eligible".

The final amount paid out "is likely to be slightly lower," Schnurbein said, adding that the British authorities had given quite a large range for their estimation of the possible payout, at between 62.5 million and 125 million pounds (123.5-247 million dollars, 92-184 million euros).

Any payout would be unlikely to be made for "at least seven-eight months" as the damage estimates would have to be checked and then agreement reached by the 27 EU member states before Britain received the aid, she added.

Britain's Communities and Local Government Minister John Healy earlier this month referred to the EU help as "a useful addition to the package of support we're already putting in place."

The aid would be for Humberside, in northeast England, and York, in northern England, which were hit by floods in June, and for towns affected by more flooding last month along the Thames and Severn rivers.

The floods, Britain's worst for 60 years, led to almost 60,000 claims for damage in both the north and south of England, said the Association of British Insurers.

Four people were killed in the June floods which affected north and central England, while three died in the south, all in Tewkesbury, where the waters reached the feet of the town's ancient abbey.

Since the Solidarity fund came into force in 2002, the European Commission has received 41 applications for financial assistance of which 22, mostly for major disasters, led to the granting of more than one billion euros in total.

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Asia-Pacific bears brunt of disasters in recent years
Sydney (AFP) Aug 20, 2007
Asia-Pacific countries accounted for 90 percent of people affected by natural disasters around the world since 2000, the region's emergency management chiefs were told Monday.







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