River basins around the world, including in India, are vulnerable to increased flood danger from rising global temperatures, according to ne...
River basins around the world, including in India, are vulnerable to increased flood danger from rising global temperatures, according to new research.
The study from the University of
East Anglia (UEA) shows even a modest temperature increase of 1.5 degrees
Celsius will spell significant risks for parts of India, China, Ethiopia,
Ghana, Brazil and Egypt.
The findings are published in the
journal Climatic Change.
The team looked at fluvial flood
risks for six global warming levels between 1.5 and 4 degrees Celsius by 2100.
The study examined six countries all
considered to be vulnerable to climate change, selected from different
continents, spanning different levels of development and ranging considerably
in size.
Daily time series of precipitation,
temperature and monthly potential evapotranspiration were generated by
combining monthly observations, daily reanalysis data, and projected changes in
the five CMIP5 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5, Global Climate
Models).
These series were then used to drive
the hydrological and hydrodynamic models to simulate river discharge and flood
inundation.
“Our results indicate that return
periods of one-in-100-year floods in the late 20th century are likely to
decrease with warming, meaning an increased number of people will be exposed to
flood risks, particularly with 4 degrees Celsius warming,” said Dr Yi He,
Associate Professor in UEA’s School of Environmental Sciences.
“Exposure in the major river basin
areas in the six countries increases significantly, ranging from a doubling in
China to more than 50-fold in Egypt.
“Limiting warming to 1.5 degrees
Celsius would decrease the risks, resulting in increases ranging from 12 per
cent in China to around 13-fold in Egypt,” he said.
A one-in-100-year flood event is
defined as an event of a size that will be equalled or exceeded on average once
every 100 years. That is, over a period of 1,000 years, a one-in-100-year event
would expect to be equalled or exceeded ten times.
But this doesn’t mean such floods only occur at that
frequency, and experts believe climate change is leading to more frequent large
floods, the likes of which have struck parts of Britain, Germany, the United
States, Australia and China in recent years, due to record-breaking or heavy,
sustained rainfall.
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