Assessing the economic impacts of future fluvial flooding in six countries under climate change and socio-economic development

被引:0
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作者
Zhiqiang Yin
Yixin Hu
Katie Jenkins
Yi He
Nicole Forstenhäusler
Rachel Warren
Lili Yang
Rhosanna Jenkins
Dabo Guan
机构
[1] University of East Anglia,School of International Development
[2] University of East Anglia,Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, School of Environmental Sciences
[3] University College London,The Bartlett School of Sustainable Construction
[4] Southern University of Science and Technology,Department of Statistics and Data Science
[5] Loughborough University,School of Business and Economics
[6] Tsinghua University,Department of Earth System Science
来源
Climatic Change | 2021年 / 166卷
关键词
Fluvial flooding; Economic impacts; Climate change; Socio-economic development;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Floods are among the most frequent and costliest natural hazards. Fluvial flood losses are expected to increase in the future, driven by population and economic growth in flood-prone areas, and exacerbated in many regions by effects of climate change on the hydrological cycle. Yet, studies assessing direct and indirect economic impacts of fluvial flooding in combination with climate change and socio-economic projections at a country level are rare. This study presents an integrated flood risk analysis framework to calculate total (direct and indirect) economic damages, with and without socio-economic development, under a range of warming levels from < 1.5 to 4 °C in Brazil, China, India, Egypt, Ethiopia, and Ghana. Direct damages are estimated by linking spatially explicit daily flood hazard data from the Catchment-based Macro-scale Floodplain (CaMa-Flood) model with country- and sector-specific depth-damage functions. These values input into an economic Input-Output model for the estimation of indirect losses. The study highlights that total fluvial flood losses are largest in China and India when expressed in absolute terms. When expressed as a share of national GDP, Egypt faces the largest total losses under both the climate change and climate change plus socio-economic development experiments. The magnitude of indirect losses also increased significantly when socio-economic development was modelled. The study highlights the importance of including socio-economic development when estimating direct and indirect flood losses, as well as the role of recovery dynamics, essential to provide a more comprehensive picture of potential losses that will be important for decision makers.
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