Publication | Open Access
Assessing flood risk at the global scale: model setup, results, and sensitivity
434
Citations
35
References
2013
Year
EngineeringNatural DisastersFlood ControlHydrologic HazardEarth ScienceGlobal ScaleExtreme Value DistributionManagementModel SetupFlood RiskGeographyHydrologyEconomic LossesFlash FloodHydrological DisasterWater ResourcesCivil EngineeringModel CascadeDisaster Risk ReductionFlood Risk ManagementFlooded Area
Globally, economic losses from flooding exceeded $19 billion in 2012, and are rising rapidly. Hence, there is an increasing need for global-scale flood risk assessments, also within the context of integrated global assessments. We have developed and validated a model cascade for producing global flood risk maps, based on numerous flood return-periods. Validation results indicate that the model simulates interannual fluctuations in flood impacts well. The cascade involves: hydrological and hydraulic modelling; extreme value statistics; inundation modelling; flood impact modelling; and estimating annual expected impacts. The initial results estimate global impacts for several indicators, for example annual expected exposed population (169 million); and annual expected exposed GDP ($1383 billion). These results are relatively insensitive to the extreme value distribution employed to estimate low frequency flood volumes. However, they are extremely sensitive to the assumed flood protection standard; developing a database of such standards should be a research priority. Also, results are sensitive to the use of two different climate forcing datasets. The impact model can easily accommodate new, user-defined, impact indicators. We envisage several applications, for example: identifying risk hotspots; calculating macro-scale risk for the insurance industry and large companies; and assessing potential benefits (and costs) of adaptation measures.
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