flood risk assessment for emergency preparedness and response

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Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response. Paolo Reggiani & Nathalie Asselman WL | Delft Hydraulics Symposium on Multihazard Early Warning Systems for Integrated Disaster Risk Management WMO- Geneva 23-24 May 2006

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Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response. Paolo Reggiani & Nathalie Asselman WL | Delft Hydraulics Symposium on Multihazard Early Warning Systems for Integrated Disaster Risk Management WMO- Geneva 23-24 May 2006. Definition of Flood Risk:. Risk = damage x probability. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and

Response. Paolo Reggiani & Nathalie Asselman

WL | Delft Hydraulics

Symposium on Multihazard Early Warning Systems for Integrated Disaster Risk Management

WMO- Geneva 23-24 May 2006

Page 2: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Definition of Flood Risk:

Risk = damage x probabilityRisk = damage x probability

Page 3: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Damage

Damage is function of:• type and number of buildings• land use• infrastructure• flooding characteristics….

Page 4: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Important flooding characteristics:• time of inundation (winter / summer)• rate of rise• duration of inundation• water depths• flow velocities

Flooding characteristics

Page 5: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Damage andcasualties

model developed at

Delft Hydraulics for

the Dutch situation

Page 6: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

General

• Development of a standard method to compute costs and casualties caused by flooding.

• Implemented in a Hydrological Information System (HIS).

• Initiated by Road and Hydraulic Engineering Division, Directorate-General of Public Works and Water Managementm, The Netherlands.

• The method is applicable for situations world-wide.

Page 7: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Aim and applicability

• Modelling system to estimate/predict damage caused by low-frequency floods.

• Floods and inundations originating from “larger” water bodies.

YES: dike breaks.

NO: local inundation from sewage systems.• No difference between salt and fresh water.

Page 8: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

What is modelled?

• Casualties

• Damage

• loss of capital goods (houses, infrastructure, etc.)

• reduced productivity

• loss of income (businesses, shops, restaurants, etc.)

Page 9: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Procedure

Model•damage functions

Data•land use type•nr of inhabitants•etc.

Flooding scenario

damagedamage function

water depth

land use

Page 10: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Total damage estimation:

with: i = damage-factor for category i (e.g. houses, roads, etc.)

ni = number of units in category i

Di = max. damage per unit in category i

1

n

i i ii

D n D

Page 11: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Damage factor i

Varies from 0 to 1

Function of:

• depth of inundation

• (critical) flow velocity

• storm(waves)

• rate of rise (important for number of casualties)

Page 12: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Problems:

• Number of casualties depends on water depth and flow velocities after dike break, but also on possible warning and evacuation beforehand

• Damage relations for other categories mainly based on theory as little ‘experimental’ data are available form previous flood experience

• Use of experimental data still poses problems

Page 13: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Utrecht

Amsterdam

Den Haag

Rotterdam

NorthSea

Rhine

Meu

se

Page 14: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

December 1993 - January 1995

3700

3800

3900

4000

4100

4200

4300

4400

4500

4600

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

tijd (uren)

wat

er le

vel (

m +

msl

)

h-dec93 h-jan95

Page 15: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Damage claims

Cathegory (aggregated)

1993 (million guilders)

1995 (million guilders)

Private properties

96 48

Agricultural companies

39 42

Other companies

71 62

Government 61 39

Total ca. 270 ca. 190

Page 16: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Damage data private properties: houses

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

35000

40000

45000

0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3

water depth (m)

da

ma

ge

(fl

)

HD-95 HD-93 FD-theory

Page 17: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Damage data private properties: furniture

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3

water depth (m)

da

ma

ge

(fl

)

FD-95 FD_93 FD-theory

Page 18: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Why are the costs for the second flood lower ?

• People take measures to reduce the damage:• tiled floor instead of parquet floor• put furniture on first floor when probability for

flooding increases

--> difficult to include in damage model !!

Page 19: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Improvement of the damage models: current research

• adjust damage functions• economic – loss of income (TU Twente)• houses and roads (TNO)

• environmental risks (Alterra, TNO, GeoDelft, CSO, WL)

• casualties / victims (WL, DWW)

Page 20: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Case study area ‘Zuid-Holland’

Page 21: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Flooding characteristics: water depth

Page 22: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Flooding characteristics: flow velocities

Page 23: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Isochrones of inundation (in hours after dike break)

Page 24: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Is it possible to escape ?• based on evacuation model for different area

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50

time (hours after dike break)

perc

enta

ge o

f pe

ople

tha

t ha

ve e

scap

ed

empirical relationships established for different areas

Page 25: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Percentage of inhabitants that are able to escape (based on data on road network)

Page 26: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Estimated number of casualties (based on 1953 flood data, Zeeland province)

Page 27: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

The Problem – time to escape

Page 28: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

First estimate

City (suburb) Rotterdam-Hilligersberg

available time (hours) 60

route A20 Gouda

distance (km) 27

driving speed (km/h) 20

driving time needed (hours) 1,5

time elapsed before departure (hours)

4

total time (hours) 5,5

risk ? very low

Page 29: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Second estimate

City (suburb) Rotterdam-Hilligersberg

bottleneck road to highway, highway

available time (hours) 1

distance to bottleneck (km) 1,5

total time needed (hours) 4,1

risk ? very large !

Page 30: Flood Risk Assessment for Emergency Preparedness and Response

Main lesson learned?

• A traffic / transport model is needed to obtain the most realistic estimate of potential number of casualties

• Good instructions beforehand may reduce the risk of wrong decisions with respect to choice of route