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Abstract. Developing predictions of coastal flooding risk on subseasonal timescales (2–6 weeks in advance) is an emerging priority for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). In this study, we assess the ability of two current operational forecast systems, the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) and the Centre National de Recherches Météorologiques climate model (CNRM), to make subseasonal ensemble predictions of the non-tidal residual component of coastal water levels at United States coastal gauge stations for the period 2000–2019. These models were chosen because they assimilate satellite altimetry at forecast initialization and attempt to predict the mean sea level, including a global mean component whose absence in other forecast systems complicates assessment of tide gauge reforecast skill. Both forecast systems have skill that exceeds damped persistence for forecast leads through 2–3 weeks, with IFS skill exceeding damped persistence for leads up to 6 weeks. Post-processing forecasts to include the inverse barometer effect, derived from mean sea level pressure forecasts, improves skill for relatively short forecast leads (1–3 weeks). Accounting for vertical land motion of each gauge primarily improves skill for longer leads (3–6 weeks), especially for the Alaskan and Gulf coasts; sea-level trends contribute to reforecast skill for both model and persistence forecasts, primarily for the East and Gulf coasts. Overall, we find that current forecast systems have sufficiently high levels of deterministic and probabilistic skill to be used in support of operational coastal flood guidance on subseasonal timescales.
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Coastal high tide flooding doubled in the U.S. between 2000 and 2022 and sea level rise (SLR) due to climate change will dramatically increase exposure and vulnerability to flooding in the future. However, standards for elevating buildings in flood hazard areas, such as base flood elevations set by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, are based on historical flood data and do not account for future SLR. To increase flood resilience in flood hazard areas, federal, state, regional, and municipal planning initiatives are developing guidance to increase elevation requirements for occupied spaces in buildings. However, methods to establish a flood elevation that specifically accounts for rising sea levels (or sea level rise-adjusted design flood elevation (SLR-DFE)) are not standardized. Many municipalities or designers lack clear guidance on developing or incorporating SLR-DFEs. This study compares guidance documents, policies, and methods for establishing an SLR-DFE. The authors found that the initiatives vary in author, water level measurement starting point, SLR scenario and timeframe, SLR adjustment, freeboard, design flood elevation, application (geography and building type), and whether it is required or recommended. The tables and graph compare the different initiatives, providing a useful summary for policymakers and practitioners to develop SLR-DFE standards. © 2025 by the authors.
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AbstractThe frequency and severity of floods has increased in different regions of the world due to climate change. Although the impact of floods on human health has been extensively studied, the increase in the segments of the population that are likely to be impacted by floods in the future makes it necessary to examine how adaptation measures impact the mental health of individuals affected by these natural disasters. The goal of this scoping review is to document the existing studies on flood adaptation measures and their impact on the mental health of affected populations, in order to identify the best preventive strategies as well as limitations that deserve further exploration. This study employed the methodology of the PRISMA-ScR extension for scoping reviews to systematically search the databases Medline and Web of Science to identify studies that examined the impact of adaptation measures on the mental health of flood victims. The database queries resulted in a total of 857 records from both databases. Following two rounds of screening, 9 studies were included for full-text analysis. Most of the analyzed studies sought to identify the factors that drive resilience in flood victims, particularly in the context of social capital (6 studies), whereas the remaining studies analyzed the impact of external interventions on the mental health of flood victims, either from preventive or post-disaster measures (3 studies). There is a very limited number of studies that analyze the impact of adaptation measures on the mental health of populations and individuals affected by floods, which complicates the generalizability of their findings. There is a need for public health policies and guidelines for the development of flood adaptation measures that adequately consider a social component that can be used to support the mental health of flood victims.
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Combined sewer surcharges in densely urbanized areas have become more frequent due to the expansion of impervious surfaces and intensified precipitation caused by climate change. These surcharges can generate system overflows, causing urban flooding and pollution of urban areas. This paper presents a novel methodology to mitigate sewer system surcharges and control surface water. In this methodology, flow control devices and urban landscape retrofitting are proposed as strategies to reduce water inflow into the sewer network and manage excess water on the surface during extreme rainfall events. For this purpose, a 1D/2D dual drainage model was developed for two case studies located in Montreal, Canada. Applying the proposed methodology to these two sites led to a reduction of the volume of wastewater overflows by 100% and 86%, and a decrease in the number of surface overflows by 100% and 71%, respectively, at the two sites for a 100-year return period 3-h Chicago design rainfall. It also controlled the extent of flooding, reduced the volume of uncontrolled surface floods by 78% and 80% and decreased flooded areas by 68% and 42%, respectively, at the two sites for the same design rainfall.
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Geohazards associated with the dynamics of the liquid and solid water of the Earth’s hydrosphere, such as floods and glacial processes, may pose significant risks to populations, activities and properties [...]
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Climate change and more frequent severe storms have caused persistent flooding, storm surges, and erosion in the northeastern coastal region of the United States. These weather-related disasters have continued to generate negative environmental consequences across many communities. This study examined how coastal residents’ exposure to flood risk information and information seeking behavior were related to their threat appraisal, threat-coping efficacy, and participation in community action in the context of building social resilience. A random sample of residents of a coastal community in the Northeastern United States was selected to participate in an online survey (N = 302). Key study results suggested that while offline news exposure was weakly related to flood vulnerability perception, online news exposure and mobile app use were both weakly associated with flood-risk information seeking. As flood vulnerability perception was strongly connected to flood severity perception but weakly linked to lower self-efficacy beliefs, flood severity perception was weakly and moderately associated with response-efficacy beliefs and information seeking, respectively. Furthermore, self-efficacy beliefs, response efficacy beliefs, and flood-risk information seeking were each a weak or moderate predictor of collective efficacy beliefs. Lastly, flood risk information-seeking was a strong predictor and collective efficacy beliefs were a weak predictor of community action for flood-risk management. This study tested a conceptual model that integrated the constructs from risk communication, information seeking, and protection motivation theory. Based on the modeling results reflecting a set of first-time findings, theoretical and practical implications are discussed.