Showing posts with label flooding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flooding. Show all posts

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Indian Updates: Mumbai, Kolkata to suffer huge damage from sea flooding by 2050: Study (19 Aug 2013)

Mumbai, Kolkata to suffer huge damage from sea flooding by 2050: Study
A file photo of strong wind and rain in the outskirts of Kolkata city on May 25, 2009. (TOI Photo)

Mumbai, Kolkata to suffer huge damage from sea flooding by 2050: Study
, TNN | Aug 19, 2013, 03.19 PM IST

NEW DELHI: Mumbai and Kolkata are at risk of suffering several billions of dollars of damages by 2050 due to flooding even if they upgrade their protection, a study has warned. Mumbai would lose $6.4 billion and Kolkata $3.4 billion annually, the study published in Nature Climate Change estimated.


In the worst case scenario, the world's 136 largest coastal cities could risk combined annual losses of $1 trillion (750 billion euros) from floods by 2050 unless they drastically raise their defenses, the study said.

Flood exposure is increasing in coastal cities owing to growing populations and assets, the changing climate, and subsidence, the study found.

World Bank economist Stephane Hallegatte and colleagues composed a loss risk scenario based on city population growth as well as different levels of sea level rise, protection upgrades and subsidence—the sinking of surface areas often linked to the extraction of oil or other ground resources.

Average global flood losses in 2005 are estimated to be approximately US$6?billion per year. Assuming cities improve their protection to contain the flood risk to current levels, and based purely on the projected growth of city populations and the assets accumulated there, the team warned of a nine-fold increase in losses to $52 billion per year by 2050, AFP reported.

However, this figure changes dramatically once climate change induced sea level rise and subsidence is factored in. It increases to between $60 and $63 billion per year.

"With no adaptation (of flood protection), the projected increase in average losses by 2050 is huge, with aggregate losses increasing to more than $1 trillion per year," said the study—a worst-case-scenario.

But even the best protection in the world won't eliminate the risk, said the study. While higher dykes can reduce flooding, the magnitude of losses when they do occur will continue to rise.

"We have more and more people depending on these protections. That means that if we have a dyke rupture, as there are more people behind the dykes, we will have ever bigger catastrophes," Hallegatte told AFP.

With protection upgrades, the cities with the highest projected annual losses by 2050 were Guangzhou ($13.2 billion), Mumbai ($6.4 billion) and Kolkota ($3.4 billion) in India, Guayaquil ($3.2 billion) in Ecuador and Shenzhen ($3.1 billion) in China. For Guangzhou, this represented an 11 percent rise on 2005 losses and for Kolkota 24 percent, said the authors.

Number six on the list was Miami, with projected annual losses of $2.5 billion, followed by Tianjin in China with $2.3 billion, New York with $2 billion, Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam with $1.9 billion and New Orleans with $1.9 billion, AFP reported.

Rich cities, many of them in areas more at risk from flooding, can generally afford better defences than poor cities which are over-represented among those that risk the biggest losses, said the study.

Amsterdam, for example, has about $83 billion of assets exposed to extreme flooding—yet its average annual loss was $3 million due to having the world's best flood defences.

New Orleans, on the other hand, has annual losses estimated at $600 million, though improvements have been made since Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

According to Hallegatte, the team has calculated that about $50 billion per year would be required to boost flood protection for the 136 cities in the report—"far below" the estimated losses.

Source:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/global-warming/Mumbai-Kolkata-to-suffer-huge-damage-from-sea-flooding-by-2050-Study/articleshow/21913568.cms

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Publication: Global warming may up flood risk in India, Southeast Asia by Yukiko Hirabayashi at the University of Tokyo's Institute of Engineering Innovation (10 Jun 2013)

The Times of India

Global warming may up flood risk in India, Southeast Asia
PTI | Jun 10, 2013, 09.51 PM IST

TOKYO: Unchecked global warming may increase the risk of flooding at the end of this century in 42 per cent of the Earth's land surface, including parts of India, Southeast Asia and Africa, a new study has warned.

According to a research team led by Yukiko Hirabayashi at the University of Tokyo's Institute of Engineering Innovation, the number of people exposed to the risk of flooding would increase from the current estimate of 5.6 million to 80 million by 2100 if temperatures rise by 3.5 C degrees during the period.

"An ensemble of projections under a new high-concentration scenario demonstrates a large increase in flood frequency in Southeast Asia, Peninsular India, eastern Africa and the northern half of the Andes, with small uncertainty in the direction of change," the study said.

However, flood frequency is projected to decline in certain areascovering 18 per cent of the land surface, it said.

The research team made the projections based on the output of 11 existing climate models and its own programme designed to forecast river inundation, The Japan Times quoted Kyodo News agency as reporting.

If global warming progresses without effective countermeasures, many of the world's 29 major rivers would see massive floods, which currently occur once a century, at an increased frequency of every 10 to 50 years, the researchers said.

The study was published in the journal Nature Climate Change.

Source: 
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/global-warming/Global-warming-may-up-flood-risk-in-India-Southeast-Asia/articleshow/20526776.cms

Monday, June 10, 2013

New Books: Flood Risk Management: A Strategic Approach by Paul Sayers, Li Yuanyuan, Gerry Galloway, Edmund Penning-Rowsell, Shen Fuxin, Wen Kang, Chen Yiwei and Tom Le Quesne (May 2013)

Flood Risk Management: A Strategic Approach

Date:May 2013
Type:Books
Subject:
ISBN:978-92-3-001159-8 (print)

Description
Over recent decades the concept of flood risk management has been cultivated across the globe. Implementation however remains stubbornly difficult to achieve. In part this reflects the perception that a risk management paradigm is more complex than a more traditional standard-based approach as it involves "whole systems" and "whole life" thinking; yet this is its main strength and a prerequisite for more integrated and informed decision making.
This book is the result of a collaborative effort between the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the General Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Planning and Design (GIWP), Ministry of Water Resources, People’s Republic of China, UNESCO, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), and a number of leading international experts from the United Kingdom, South Africa, Australia, and the United States.
It was originally conceived to review and disseminate modern approaches to water management in challenging environments, providing new insights into good strategic planning and risk management of water resources. This book provides a focus on strategic flood risk management and is one in series of six books, which together consider three fundamental water resources management issues: river basin planning (Pegram et al., 2013), basin water allocation (Speed et al., 2013), and strategic flood risk management.
The book focuses on strategic flood risk management policy and practice, and provides an overview of
  • the historical developments and emerging trends in flood management;
  • the purpose and characteristics of modern  flood risk management;
  • the goals, objectives and outcomes sought;
  • the ongoing challenges in developing and implementing  flood risk management in practice together with some of the common pitfalls and misconceptions; and
  • a summary of some specific tools and techniques and how they support good decision making.

Contents

  • Executive Summary
  • Glossary of Terms
  • Introduction
  • Historical Developments and Emerging Trends
    • Historical Developments and Emerging Trends
  • The Philosophy and Process of Flood Risk Management
    • Modern Flood Risk Management
    • Goals, Objectives and Outcomes
    • Governance Frameworks of Flood Risk Management
    • The Adaptive Process of Flood Risk Management
    • Safeguarding and Promoting Ecosystem Services through FRM
    • Implementing Flood Risk Management – Barriers and Enablers
  • Supporting Tools and Techniques for Flood Risk Management
    • Risk and Uncertainty: Principles and Analysis
    • Spatial Planning in Support of Managing Flood Risk
    • Infrastructure Management
    • Emergency Planning and Management
    • Flood Hazard and Risk Mapping
    • Flash Floods - Managing the Risks
    • Insurance and Flood Risk
  • References

DOWNLOAD FOR FREE



Friday, March 8, 2013

Publication: Case studies on flash flood risk management in the Himalayas: in support of specific flash flood policies by A. B. Shrestha and S. R. Bajracharya (Mar2013)


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Case studies on flash flood risk management in the Himalayas: in support of specific flash flood policies

Edited by A. B. Shrestha and S. R. Bajracharya
Published by International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development 2013

View full report




Countries in the Hindu Kush Himalayan region generally lack policies, strategies and plans which deal specifically with flash floods. The purpose of the case studies in this report is to create a knowledge base on flash flood processes in different parts of the Hindu Kush Himalayan region. The report examines the region’s diverse climatic and socioeconomic conditions in order to understand existing flash flood risk management mechanisms, including policies and institutional mechanisms, and increase awareness about flash floods. The eight case studies were conducted in Xichang and Niujuangou in Sichuan, China; Dhemaji District in Assam, India; the Bhote Koshi/Sun Koshi basin (two case studies), Lal Bakaiya and Madi in Nepal; and Chitral District in Pakistan. This report contains a summary of each case study, as well as an overview of the status of flash flood risk management in the region and a list of regional recommendations for policymakers.


For more information: