Publication | Open Access
Impact of modelling scale on probabilistic flood risk assessment: the Malawi case
13
Citations
9
References
2016
Year
EngineeringFlood ControlHydrologic HazardNatural Hazard AssessmentEarth ScienceRisk ManagementFlood ModelingMalawi CaseHydrological ModelingStatisticsFlood RiskGeographyHot SpotsHydrologyHigh Resolution DataHydrological DisasterWater ResourcesCivil EngineeringDisaster Risk ReductionFlood Risk ManagementFlooded Area
In the early months of 2015, destructive floods hit Malawi, causing deaths and economic losses. Flood risk assessment outcomes can be used to increase scientific-supported awareness of risk. The recent increase in availability of high resolution data such as TanDEM-X at 12m resolution makes possible the use of detailed physical based flood hazard models in risk assessment. Nonetheless the scale of hazard modelling still remains an issue, which requires a compromise between level of detail and computational efforts. This work presents two different approaches on hazard modelling. Both methods rely on 32-years of numeric weather re-analysis and rainfall-runoff transformation through a fully distributed WFLOW-type hydrological model. The first method, applied at national scale, uses fast post-processing routines, which estimate flood water depth at a resolution of about 1×1km. The second method applies a full 2D hydraulic model to propagate water discharge into the flood plains and best suites for small areas where assets are concentrated. At the 12m resolution, three hot spots with a model area of approximately 10×10 km are analysed. Flood hazard maps obtained with both approaches are combined with flood impact models at the same resolution to generate indicators for flood risk. A quantitative comparison of the two approaches is presented in order to show the effects of modelling scale on both hazard and impact losses.
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