Extreme flooding and drought make risk management difficult

Publicly released:
Australia; International
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

Effective risk management can reduce vulnerability to floods and droughts, but it faces an uphill battle as climate change is expected to produce more extreme weather events. Researchers looked at 26 pairs of floods and 19 pairs of droughts that had occurred in the same area between 1947 and 2019. Their findings show that while risk management generally reduces the impact from floods and droughts, it struggles to reduce the impact of events that are larger than previously experienced. There were two pairs in which the second event had a lower impact despite increased hazard. The authors identified three success factors in these cases - effective governance of risk and emergency management, high investment in structural and non-structural measures, and improved early warning systems.

 

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Risk management strategies for floods and droughts may not reduce the effects of unprecedented events, a paper in Nature suggests. The findings highlight the difficulty of managing such extreme events, which are likely to increase as a result of climate change. 

Risk management strategies have reduced global vulnerability to floods and droughts, but the effects of such events are still severe and increasing in many parts of the world. Forecasts for 2 °C of warming suggest that the economic impacts of floods may double globally, and in Europe the economic impact of droughts could triple. Understanding why changes in impact occur is important, but this has been hindered by a lack of empirical data. 

Heidi Kreibich and colleagues analysed a dataset of 45 pairs of flood or drought events that occurred in the same area at different time points (16 years apart on average) to assess the effects of risk management strategies. They show that, in general, risk management reduced the impact of floods and droughts; however, when the events were of magnitudes not previously experienced, their effects might not be lessened regardless of the risk management approaches taken. The authors suggest that this outcome may be due to thresholds of infrastructure designed to manage the hazard, such as levees or water reservoirs, being exceeded. The authors also suggest that flaws in human risk perception, especially for rare extreme events, might affect efforts to anticipate them and lessen their effects. 

There were two pairs of events (flooding in Barcelona in 1995 and 2018 and Danube catchment floods in Austria and Germany in 2002 and 2013) for which the second event was more hazardous, but the effects were less than those of the first event. Kreibich and colleagues suggest that this was due to improved risk management and investment in integrated management approaches, which led to improved early warning and emergency responses, complemented by structural changes such as levees. The authors conclude that these successful responses could be used to identify risk management strategies to reduce the effects of unprecedented events, which may increase because of climate change.

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Springer Nature, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends.
Journal/
conference:
Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: GFZ, Germany
Funder: Open access funding provided by Helmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum - GFZ.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.