Higher probability of compound flooding from precipitation and storm surge in Europe under anthropogenic climate change
University of Graz · Joint Research Centre · +5 more institutions
Abstract
In low-lying coastal areas, the co-occurrence of high sea level and precipitation resulting in large runoff may cause compound flooding (CF). When the two hazards interact, the resulting impact can be worse than when they occur individually. Both storm surges and heavy precipitation, as well as their interplay, are likely to change in response to global warming. Despite the CF relevance, a comprehensive hazard assessment beyond individual locations is missing, and no studies have examined CF in the future. Analyzing co-occurring high sea level and heavy precipitation in Europe, we show that the Mediterranean coasts are experiencing the highest CF probability in the present. However, future climate projections…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.05
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
7- EBEmanuele BevacquaCorresponding
University of Graz
- DMDouglas Maraun
University of Graz
- MVMichalis Vousdoukas
Joint Research Centre, University of the Aegean
- EVEvangelos Voukouvalas
Leefmilieu Brussel
- MVMathieu Vrac
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement
Topics & keywords
- Storm surge
- Flooding (psychology)
- Precipitation
- Storm
- Environmental science
- Climate change
- Flood myth
- Climatology