EGU22-3122
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-3122
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Linking the relative importance of input uncertainties of a flood risk model with basin characteristics.

Georgios Sarailidis1, Francesca Pianosi1, Thorsten Wagener2, Rob Lamb3,4, Kirsty Styles5, and Stephen Hutchings5
Georgios Sarailidis et al.
  • 1Bristol, University of Bristol, Civil Engineering, Bristol, United Kingdom
  • 2Institute of Environmental Science and Geography, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
  • 3JBA Trust, Skipton, United Kingdom
  • 4Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancashire, United Kingdom
  • 5JBA Risk Management, Skipton, United Kingdom

Floods are extreme natural hazards often with disastrous impacts on the economy and society. Flood risk assessments are required to better manage risk associated with floods. Nowadays, numerous flood risk models are available at various scales, from catchment to regional or even global scale. They involve a complex modelling chain that estimates risk as the product of probability of occurrence of an event (hazard) with its footprint (exposure) and the consequences over society and economy (vulnerability). Each component of this chain contains uncertainties, that propagate and contribute to the uncertainty in the model outputs. Much effort has been made to quantify such output uncertainty and attribute it to the various uncertainty sources in the modelling chain. However, the key drivers of uncertainty in flood risk estimates are still unclear because previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions.  Two things could possibly explain these ambiguous outcomes. First, these studies were implemented with different models and with different data, as well as different assumptions for the uncertainty and sensitivity analysis. Second, the studies were conducted at catchment and/or city scale with limited variability of physical and socio-economic characteristics within a study region, but with potentially large differences across study regions. In this project, we study the question of uncertainty quantification and attribution at much larger scale, namely the heterogeneous region of the Rhine River basin. In this way, we can identify spatial patterns of dominant input uncertainties and link them to characteristics, e.g. physical, socio-economic, in the different sub-basins. To this end, we use an industry flood risk model (catastrophe model) provided by JBA Risk Management which is capable of simulating flood risk across such a large region. Our ultimate goal is to provide evidence of how the importance of uncertainties varies across places with different climatic, hydrologic and socio-economic characteristics.

How to cite: Sarailidis, G., Pianosi, F., Wagener, T., Lamb, R., Styles, K., and Hutchings, S.: Linking the relative importance of input uncertainties of a flood risk model with basin characteristics., EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-3122, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-3122, 2022.

Displays

Display file