NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to climate change

Di uno scrittore di uomini misteriosi

Descrizione

Abstract. Heavy precipitation over western Germany and neighboring countries in July 2021 led to widespread floods, with the Ahr and Erft river catchments being particularly affected. Following the event characterization and process analysis in Part 1, here we put the 2021 event in the historical context regarding precipitation and discharge records and in terms of the temporal transformation of the valley morphology. Furthermore, we evaluated the role of ongoing and future climate change on the modification of rainfall totals and the associated flood hazard, as well as implications for flood management. The event was among the five heaviest precipitation events of the past 70 years in Germany. However, consideration of the large LAERTES-EU regional climate model (RCM) ensemble revealed a substantial underestimation of both return levels and periods based on extreme value statistics using only observations. An analysis of homogeneous hydrological data of the last 70 years demonstrated that the event discharges exceeded by far the statistical 100-year return levels. Nevertheless, the flood peaks at the Ahr river were comparable to the reconstructed major historical events of 1804 and 1910, which were not included in the flood risk assessment so far. A comparison between the 2021 and past events showed differences in terms of the observed hydro-morphodynamic processes which enhanced the flood risk due to changes in the landscape organization and occupation. The role of climate change and how the 2021 event would unfold under warmer or colder conditions (within a −2 to +3 K range) was considered based on both a pseudo global warming (PGW) model experiments and the analysis of an RCM ensemble. The PGW experiments showed that the spatial mean precipitation scales with the theoretical Clausius–Clapeyron (CC) relation, predicting a 7 % to 9 % increase per degree of warming. Using the PGW rainfall simulations as input to a hydrological model of the Ahr river basin revealed a strong and non-linear effect on flood peaks: for the +2 K scenario, the 18 % increase in areal rainfall led to a 39 % increase of the flood peak at gauge Altenahr. The analysis of the high-resolution convection-permitting KIT-KLIWA RCM ensemble confirmed the CC scaling for moderate spatial mean precipitation but showed a super CC scaling of up to 10 % for higher intensities. Moreover, the spatial extent of such precipitation events is also expected to increase.
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of July 2021 in central Europe – Part 1: Event description and analysis
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
A synergistic approach towards understanding flood risks over coastal multi-hazard environments: Appraisal of bivariate flood risk mapping through flood hazard, and socio-economic-cum-physical vulnerability dimensions - ScienceDirect
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
Frontiers Climate Patterns in the World's Longest History of Storm-Erosivity: The Arno River Basin, Italy, 1000–2019 CE
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
Advances in the Application and Utility of Subseasonal-to-Seasonal Predictions in: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Volume 103 Issue 6 (2022)
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
Applied Sciences, Free Full-Text
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
The 2021 report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate change: code red for a healthy future - The Lancet
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
The Mediterranean region under climate change - Sub-chapter 1.3.4. Mediterranean extreme floods and flash floods - IRD Éditions
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
Climate change in Viet Nam, Impacts and adaptation by Agence Française de Développement - Issuu
NHESS - A multi-disciplinary analysis of the exceptional flood event of  July 2021 in central Europe – Part 2: Historical context and relation to  climate change
3. Climate change impacts and their cascading effects: implications for losses and damages, Managing Climate Risks, Facing up to Losses and Damages
da per adulto (il prezzo varia in base alle dimensioni del gruppo)