Topography- and nightlight-based national flood risk assessment in Canada
Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Elshorbagy, Amin (Auteur)
- Bharath, R. (Auteur)
- Lakhanpal, Anchit (Auteur)
- Ceola, Serena (Auteur)
- Montanari, Alberto (Auteur)
- Lindenschmidt, Karl-Erich (Auteur)
Titre
Topography- and nightlight-based national flood risk assessment in Canada
Résumé
In Canada, flood analysis and water resource management, in general, are
tasks conducted at the provincial level; therefore, unified national-scale
approaches to water-related problems are uncommon. In this study, a
national-scale flood risk assessment approach is proposed and developed. The
study focuses on using global and national datasets available with various
resolutions to create flood risk maps. First, a flood hazard map of Canada
is developed using topography-based parameters derived from digital
elevation models, namely, elevation above nearest drainage (EAND) and distance
from nearest drainage (DFND). This flood hazard mapping method is tested on
a smaller area around the city of Calgary, Alberta, against a flood
inundation map produced by the city using hydraulic modelling. Second, a
flood exposure map of Canada is developed using a land-use map and the
satellite-based nightlight luminosity data as two exposure parameters.
Third, an economic flood risk map is produced, and subsequently overlaid
with population density information to produce a socioeconomic flood risk
map for Canada. All three maps of hazard, exposure, and risk are classified
into five classes, ranging from very low to severe. A simple way to include
flood protection measures in hazard estimation is also demonstrated using
the example of the city of Winnipeg, Manitoba. This could be done for the
entire country if information on flood protection across Canada were
available. The evaluation of the flood hazard map shows that the
topography-based method adopted in this study is both practical and reliable
for large-scale analysis. Sensitivity analysis regarding the resolution of
the digital elevation model is needed to identify the resolution that is
fine enough for reliable hazard mapping, but coarse enough for computational
tractability. The nightlight data are found to be useful for exposure and
risk mapping in Canada; however, uncertainty analysis should be conducted to
investigate the effect of the overglow phenomenon on flood risk mapping.
Publication
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Volume
21
Numéro
4
Date
2016-10-19
Extra
DOI: 10.5194/hess-21-2219-2017
MAG ID: 2535172804
Référence
Elshorbagy, A., Bharath, R., Lakhanpal, A., Ceola, S., Montanari, A., & Lindenschmidt, K.-E. (2016). Topography- and nightlight-based national flood risk assessment in Canada. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 21(4). https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-21-2219-2017
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