More meteorological events that drive compound coastal flooding are projected under climate change

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作者
Emanuele Bevacqua
Michalis I. Vousdoukas
Giuseppe Zappa
Kevin Hodges
Theodore G. Shepherd
Douglas Maraun
Lorenzo Mentaschi
Luc Feyen
机构
[1] University of Reading,Department of Meteorology
[2] University of Graz,Wegener Center for Climate and Global Change
[3] Joint European Research Centre (JRC),European Commission
[4] Istituto di Scienze dell’Atmosfera e del Clima,undefined
[5] Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (ISAC-CNR),undefined
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Compound flooding arises from storms causing concurrent extreme meteorological tides (that is the superposition of storm surge and waves) and precipitation. This flooding can severely affect densely populated low-lying coastal areas. Here, combining output from climate and ocean models, we analyse the concurrence probability of the meteorological conditions driving compound flooding. We show that, under a high emissions scenario, the concurrence probability would increase globally by more than 25% by 2100 compared to present. In latitudes above 40o north, compound flooding could become more than 2.5 times as frequent, in contrast to parts of the subtropics where it would weaken. Changes in extreme precipitation and meteorological tides account for most (77% and 20%, respectively) of the projected change in concurrence probability. The evolution of the dependence between precipitation and meteorological tide dominates the uncertainty in the projections. Our results indicate that not accounting for these effects in adaptation planning could leave coastal communities insufficiently protected against flooding.
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