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Nature Research, Nature, 7921(608), p. 80-86, 2022

DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04917-5

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The challenge of unprecedented floods and droughts in risk management

Journal article published in 2022 by Heidi Kreibich ORCID, Anne F. Van Loon ORCID, Kai Schröter ORCID, Philip J. Ward ORCID, Maurizio Mazzoleni ORCID, Nivedita Sairam ORCID, Guta Wakbulcho Abeshu ORCID, Svetlana Agafonova ORCID, Amir AghaKouchak ORCID, Hafzullah Aksoy ORCID, Camila Alvarez-Garreton ORCID, Blanca Aznar ORCID, Laila Balkhi ORCID, Marlies H. Barendrecht ORCID, Sylvain Biancamaria ORCID and other authors.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

AbstractRisk management has reduced vulnerability to floods and droughts globally1,2, yet their impacts are still increasing3. An improved understanding of the causes of changing impacts is therefore needed, but has been hampered by a lack of empirical data4,5. On the basis of a global dataset of 45 pairs of events that occurred within the same area, we show that risk management generally reduces the impacts of floods and droughts but faces difficulties in reducing the impacts of unprecedented events of a magnitude not previously experienced. If the second event was much more hazardous than the first, its impact was almost always higher. This is because management was not designed to deal with such extreme events: for example, they exceeded the design levels of levees and reservoirs. In two success stories, the impact of the second, more hazardous, event was lower, as a result of improved risk management governance and high investment in integrated management. The observed difficulty of managing unprecedented events is alarming, given that more extreme hydrological events are projected owing to climate change3.