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  4. A blueprint for full collective flood risk estimation: Demonstration for European river flooding
 
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A blueprint for full collective flood risk estimation: Demonstration for European river flooding

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2017-10-01
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Serinaldi, Francesco 
Kilsby, Chris  
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/61848
Journal
Risk analysis  
Volume
37
Issue
10
Start Page
1958
End Page
1976
Citation
Risk Analysis 37 (10): 1958-1976 (2017)
Publisher DOI
10.1111/risa.12747
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85007502830
Publisher
Wiley
Floods are a natural hazard evolving in space and time according to meteorological and river basin dynamics, so that a single flood event can affect different regions over the event duration. This physical mechanism introduces spatio-temporal relationships between flood records and losses at different locations over a given time window that should be taken into account for an effective assessment of the collective flood risk. However, since extreme floods are rare events, the limited number of historical records usually prevents a reliable frequency analysis. To overcome this limit, we move from the analysis of extreme events to the modeling of continuous stream flow records preserving spatio-temporal correlation structures of the entire process, and making a more efficient use of the information provided by continuous flow records. The approach is based on the dynamic copula framework, which allows for splitting the modeling of spatio-temporal properties by coupling suitable time series models accounting for temporal dynamics, and multivariate distributions describing spatial dependence. The model is applied to 490 stream flow sequences recorded across 10 of the largest river basins in central and eastern Europe (Danube, Rhine, Elbe, Oder, Waser, Meuse, Rhone, Seine, Loire, and Garonne). Using available proxy data to quantify local flood exposure and vulnerability, we show that the temporal dependence exerts a key role in reproducing interannual persistence, and thus magnitude and frequency of annual proxy flood losses aggregated at a basin-wide scale, while copulas allow the preservation of the spatial dependence of losses at weekly and annual time scales.
Subjects
Collective flood risk
dynamic copula space-time modeling
European rivers
DDC Class
624: Civil Engineering, Environmental Engineering
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