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posted by martyb on Thursday March 19 2020, @09:34PM   Printer-friendly
from the had-a-sinking-feeling dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

An international team of scientists, led by the University of Bristol, has found that current estimates of flood risk rely upon methods for calculating flood damage which are inadequately verified and match poorly with observations.

[...] When calculating flood risk—that is, translating modelled representations of the physical of phenomenon of flooding to its impacts—it is common to apply a 'depth-damage function' or curve, which relates a given water depth to a proportional building loss (for example one metre of water equals 50 per cent loss of building value).

[...] The new study, published today in the journal Nature Communications, used commonly applied curves, developed by various US government agencies, and examined how they compare to millions of actual flood insurance claims made in the US.

[...] It found that universally applied depth-damage curves show low skill in the replication of property-level damages, rendering the results of projects where they have been applied (for example the justification of billions of dollars of infrastructure investment) suspect.

[...] At low inundation depths, most damages are somewhat minimal (<10 per cent of building value) with a very low chance of experiencing maximal (>90 per cent) damage. But as depth increases, the distribution shifts and swings towards greater probability of high (>90 per cent) damage and lower probability of low (<10 per cent) damage.

Lead author, Dr. Oliver Wing from Bristol's School of Geographical Sciences, said: "This relationship can be represented with a beta distribution, meaning future flood risk analyses can employ a function which properly captures the true stochastic relationship between depth and damage."

More information: O. Wing, N. Pinter, P. Bates, C. Kousky. New insights into US flood vulnerability revealed from flood insurance big data.Nature Communications, 2020.

Journal information: Nature Communications


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by bzipitidoo on Friday March 20 2020, @05:53AM

    by bzipitidoo (4388) on Friday March 20 2020, @05:53AM (#973418) Journal

    Most people pay no attention to whether a house is located in a flood plain. Many others who are aware seem to think the cheaper land is worth the risk. They engage in motivated reasoning to underestimate the risk.

    It's so easy to avoid such locations, and just plain dumb to build and live there. There certainly isn't much reason, not these days. In the 19th century, towns were often built right on the river, for easy access to water. But now we have electric water pumps, which cost a whole lot less to purchase and operate than it costs to rebuild after a flood every 10 to 20 years. The water has to be treated anyway, which generally requires pumping it through a filtration plant. Essentially makes it free to pump the water away from the river.

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