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Simulation of flood hazard and risk in the Danube basin with the Future Danube Model
Author(s) -
Fred F. Hattermann,
Michel Wortmann,
Stefan Liersch,
Ralf Toumi,
Nathan Sparks,
Christopher Genillard,
Kai Schröter,
Max Steinhausen,
Miklós GyalaiKorpos,
Kinga Máté,
Ben Hayes,
María del Rocío Rivas López,
Tibor Rácz,
Marie R. Nielsen,
Per Skougaard Kaspersen,
Martin Drews
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
climate services
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.55
H-Index - 21
ISSN - 2405-8807
DOI - 10.1016/j.cliser.2018.07.001
Subject(s) - flash flood , flood myth , climate change , natural hazard , hazard , environmental resource management , climate model , environmental science , climate risk , scale (ratio) , precipitation , water resource management , extreme weather , risk management , geography , environmental planning , meteorology , business , cartography , geology , oceanography , chemistry , archaeology , organic chemistry , finance
Major river and flash flood events have accumulated in Central and Eastern Europe over the last decade reminding the public as well as the insurance sector that climate related risks are likely to become even more damaging and prevalent as climate patterns change. However, information about current and future hydro-climatic extremes is often not available. The Future Danube Model (FDM) is an end-user driven multi-hazard and risk model suite for the Danube region that has been developed to provide climate services related to perils such as heavy precipitation, heat waves, floods, and droughts under recent and scenario conditions. As a result, it provides spatially consistent information on extreme events and natural resources throughout the entire Danube catchment. It can be used to quantify climate risks, to support the implementation of the EU framework directives, for climate informed urban and land use planning, water resources management, and for climate proofing of large scale infrastructural planning including cost benefit analysis. The model suite consists of five individual and exchangeable modules: a weather and climate module, a hydrological module, a risk module, an adaptation module, and a web-based visualization module. They are linked in such a way that output from one module can either be used standalone or fed into subsequent modules. The utility of the tool has been tested by experts and stakeholders. The results show that more and more intense hydrological extremes are likely to occur under climate scenario conditions, e.g. higher order floods may occur more frequently.

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