Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China
Rapid urbanisation and economic growth in developing Asian countries have exacerbated their exposure to flood hazards, particularly evident in low-lying urban cities that are currently facing increasing risks from extreme precipitations, likely made worse by the impending climate change. We present...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1442462020-10-24T20:11:52Z Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China Jian, Wei Li, Shanshan Lai, Chengguang Wang, Zhaoli Cheng, Xiangju Lo, Edmond Yat-Man Pan, Tso-Chien School of Civil and Environmental Engineering School of Civil Engineering and Transportation, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, China Green Buildings and Smart Cities Program, Sino-Singapore International Joint Research Institute (SSIJRI), Guangzhou, China Institute of Catastrophe Risk Management (ICRM) Science Flood Hazard Assessment Rapid urbanisation and economic growth in developing Asian countries have exacerbated their exposure to flood hazards, particularly evident in low-lying urban cities that are currently facing increasing risks from extreme precipitations, likely made worse by the impending climate change. We present a set of simplified indices representative of the characteristics of rainfall-runoff process for evaluating pluvial flood hazard using the fuzzy comprehensive evaluation method. The highly urbanised Pearl River Delta (PRD) region in southern China is studied as an example of mapping the regional pluvial flood hazard and assessing the socio-economic exposure at risk. The developed hazard map captures the broad patterns of high flood hazard zones when compared with reported surface water flooding hotspots and the PRD riverine flood map from the 2015 Global Assessment Report. Further analysis on the regional socio-economic profiles suggests that most PRD cities are faced with large flood loss potential, with estimates of approximate 23 million people and 2.4 trillion RMB Gross Domestic Product (GDP) exposed to high flood hazard. Mega cities Guangzhou and Shenzhen top the ranking with over 20% to 40% of their dense urban settlements in the high flood hazard zone. This highlights the impact of human activities on the natural surface runoff process, and the need for robust flood hazard assessment for better understanding and design of holistic solutions towards more adequate flood mitigation systems for continuous urbanisation and future climate conditions. Accepted version This work was partially supported by the Sino-Singapore International Joint Research Institute (Project No. 205-A017020) and the National Key R&D Program of China (2018YFC1508200). 2020-10-23T01:23:27Z 2020-10-23T01:23:27Z 2020 Journal Article Jian, W., Li, S., Lai, C., Wang, Z., Cheng, X., Lo, E. Y.-M., & Pan, T.-C. (2020). Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities: a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China. Natural Hazards, 67(10), 1603-1609. doi:10.1007/s11069-020-04372-3 0921-030X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144246 10.1007/s11069-020-04372-3 10 67 1603 1609 en Sino-Singapore International Joint Research Institute (Project No. 205-A017020) National Key R&D Program of China (2018YFC1508200) Natural Hazards © 2020 Springer Science+Business Media. This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Natural Hazards. The final authenticated version is available online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11069-020-04372-3 application/pdf |
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Science Flood Hazard Assessment Jian, Wei Li, Shanshan Lai, Chengguang Wang, Zhaoli Cheng, Xiangju Lo, Edmond Yat-Man Pan, Tso-Chien Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China |
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Rapid urbanisation and economic growth in developing Asian countries have exacerbated their exposure to flood hazards, particularly evident in low-lying urban cities that are currently facing increasing risks from extreme precipitations, likely made worse by the impending climate change. We present a set of simplified indices representative of the characteristics of rainfall-runoff process for evaluating pluvial flood hazard using the fuzzy comprehensive evaluation method. The highly urbanised Pearl River Delta (PRD) region in southern China is studied as an example of mapping the regional pluvial flood hazard and assessing the socio-economic exposure at risk. The developed hazard map captures the broad patterns of high flood hazard zones when compared with reported surface water flooding hotspots and the PRD riverine flood map from the 2015 Global Assessment Report. Further analysis on the regional socio-economic profiles suggests that most PRD cities are faced with large flood loss potential, with estimates of approximate 23 million people and 2.4 trillion RMB Gross Domestic Product (GDP) exposed to high flood hazard. Mega cities Guangzhou and Shenzhen top the ranking with over 20% to 40% of their dense urban settlements in the high flood hazard zone. This highlights the impact of human activities on the natural surface runoff process, and the need for robust flood hazard assessment for better understanding and design of holistic solutions towards more adequate flood mitigation systems for continuous urbanisation and future climate conditions. |
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School of Civil and Environmental Engineering |
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School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Jian, Wei Li, Shanshan Lai, Chengguang Wang, Zhaoli Cheng, Xiangju Lo, Edmond Yat-Man Pan, Tso-Chien |
format |
Article |
author |
Jian, Wei Li, Shanshan Lai, Chengguang Wang, Zhaoli Cheng, Xiangju Lo, Edmond Yat-Man Pan, Tso-Chien |
author_sort |
Jian, Wei |
title |
Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China |
title_short |
Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China |
title_full |
Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China |
title_fullStr |
Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China |
title_full_unstemmed |
Evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the Pearl River Delta region in China |
title_sort |
evaluating pluvial flood hazard for highly urbanised cities : a case study of the pearl river delta region in china |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144246 |
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1683492956440363008 |