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The role of global data sets for riverine flood risk management at national scales

Bernhofen, Mark V. and Cooper, Sarah and Trigg, Mark and Mdee, Anna and Carr, Andrew and Bhave, Ajay and Solano Correa, Yady Tatiana and Pencue Fierro, Edgar Leonairo and Teferi, Ermias and Haile, Alemseged Tamiru and Yusop, Zulkifli and Alias, Nor Eliza and Sa'adi, Zulfaqar and Ramzan, Muhamad Anwar and Dhanya, C. T. and Shukla, Prabhakar (2022) The role of global data sets for riverine flood risk management at national scales. Water Resources Research, 58 (4). pp. 1-25. ISSN 0043-1397

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2021WR031555

Abstract

Over the last two decades, several data sets have been developed to assess flood risk at the global scale. In recent years, some of these data sets have become detailed enough to be informative at national scales. The use of these data sets nationally could have enormous benefits in areas lacking existing flood risk information and allow better flood management decisions and disaster response. In this study, we evaluate the usefulness of global data for assessing flood risk in five countries: Colombia, England, Ethiopia, India, and Malaysia. National flood risk assessments are carried out for each of the five countries using six data sets of global flood hazard, seven data sets of global population, and three different methods for calculating vulnerability. We also conduct interviews with key water experts in each country to explore what capacity there is to use these global data sets nationally. We find that the data sets differ substantially at the national level, and this is reflected in the national flood risk estimates. While some global data sets could be of significant value for national flood risk management, others are either not detailed enough, or too outdated to be relevant at this scale. For the relevant global data sets to be used most effectively for national flood risk management, a country needs a functioning, institutional framework with capability to support their use and implementation.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:disaster risk analysis and assessment, exposure, floods, risk, vulnerability
Subjects:T Technology > TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Divisions:Civil Engineering
ID Code:104783
Deposited By: Yanti Mohd Shah
Deposited On:01 Mar 2024 01:49
Last Modified:01 Mar 2024 01:49

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