Quantification of increased flood risk due to global climate change for urban river management planning.

M Morita
Author Information
  1. M Morita: Department of Civil Engineering, Shibaura Institute of Technology, 3-7-5, Koto-ku, Tokyo 135-8548, Japan. morita@sic.shibaura-it.ac.jp

Abstract

Global climate change is expected to affect future rainfall patterns. These changes should be taken into account when assessing future flooding risks. This study presents a method for quantifying the increase in Flood risk caused by global climate change for use in urban Flood risk management. Flood risk in this context is defined as the product of Flood damage potential and the probability of its occurrence. The study uses a geographic information system-based Flood damage prediction model to calculate the Flood damage caused by design storms with different return periods. Estimation of the monetary damages these storms produce and their return periods are precursors to Flood risk calculations. The design storms are developed from modified intensity-duration-frequency relationships generated by simulations of global climate change scenarios (e.g. CGCM2A2). The risk assessment method is applied to the Kanda River basin in Tokyo, Japan. The assessment provides insights not only into the Flood risk cost increase due to global warming, and the impact that increase may have on Flood control infrastructure planning.

MeSH Term

Climate Change
Costs and Cost Analysis
Disaster Planning
Floods
Geographic Information Systems
Models, Theoretical
Probability
Risk Assessment
Rivers
Urbanization

Word Cloud

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