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Spatial-temporal changes of coastal and marine disasters risks and impacts in Mainland China

Spatial-temporal changes of coastal and marine disasters risks and impacts in Mainland China
Spatial-temporal changes of coastal and marine disasters risks and impacts in Mainland China
China is amongst the countries most severely affected by coastal and marine disasters. In this study, the annual variation and geographic distribution of the direct economic losses and fatalities caused by rapid-onset coastal and marine disasters in China have been analysed. This was based on a collection of historical documents and official records. The five main hazards include storm surges, rough seas, sea ice, red tides and green tides. The results show that: (1) Storm surges caused the most economic losses (92% of the total); (2) At national scale, direct economic losses induced by coastal and marine disasters fluctuated with no clear trend; the number of fatalities per year declined, and in relative terms both economic losses and fatalities decreased dramatically throughout time; (3) Substantial heterogeneity exists across the 11 provincial-level administrative regions in terms of the spatial pattern and temporal trends of coastal and marine hazards, exposure, vulnerability and observed impacts. Guangzhou, Fujian, Zhejiang and Hainan provinces experienced the highest direct economic losses and fatalities due to repeated typhoon-induced storm surges. The decline in adverse impacts caused by hazards is due to substantial progress in coastal and marine disaster prevention and migration in China, largely thanks to institutional measures, plus adaptation and mitigation actions at both national and regional levels. Coastal China still faces growing risks due to socio-economic development, climate change, as well as subsidence and new emerging marine disasters (e.g. green tides). Further management needs to promote integrated solutions across socio-economic development, disaster risk reduction and environmental conservation in coastal regions. This should happen at national and international levels as disasters can affect neighboring countries and their marine environments and socio-ecological systems. Lessons may be learnt from countries experiencing similar problems over the long-term.
0964-5691
125-140
Fang, Jiayi
0dca8814-808a-4ddb-a88e-52615624ba32
Liu, Wei
b64150aa-d935-4209-804d-24c1b97e024a
Yang, Saini
7c720e2b-6cc1-44ad-8612-562577e69287
Brown, Sally
dd3c5852-78cc-435a-9846-4f3f540f2840
Nicholls, Robert
4ce1e355-cc5d-4702-8124-820932c57076
Hinkel, Jochen
9c7e8026-955c-42cd-9179-6113efbf1339
Shi, Xianwu
3fa40a87-a0e8-4f69-ac27-0c3df869a940
Shi, Peijun
5dbb7657-71b4-4a71-a7af-e7930c7ec322
Fang, Jiayi
0dca8814-808a-4ddb-a88e-52615624ba32
Liu, Wei
b64150aa-d935-4209-804d-24c1b97e024a
Yang, Saini
7c720e2b-6cc1-44ad-8612-562577e69287
Brown, Sally
dd3c5852-78cc-435a-9846-4f3f540f2840
Nicholls, Robert
4ce1e355-cc5d-4702-8124-820932c57076
Hinkel, Jochen
9c7e8026-955c-42cd-9179-6113efbf1339
Shi, Xianwu
3fa40a87-a0e8-4f69-ac27-0c3df869a940
Shi, Peijun
5dbb7657-71b4-4a71-a7af-e7930c7ec322

Fang, Jiayi, Liu, Wei, Yang, Saini, Brown, Sally, Nicholls, Robert, Hinkel, Jochen, Shi, Xianwu and Shi, Peijun (2017) Spatial-temporal changes of coastal and marine disasters risks and impacts in Mainland China. Ocean & Coastal Management, 139, 125-140. (doi:10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2017.02.003). (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

China is amongst the countries most severely affected by coastal and marine disasters. In this study, the annual variation and geographic distribution of the direct economic losses and fatalities caused by rapid-onset coastal and marine disasters in China have been analysed. This was based on a collection of historical documents and official records. The five main hazards include storm surges, rough seas, sea ice, red tides and green tides. The results show that: (1) Storm surges caused the most economic losses (92% of the total); (2) At national scale, direct economic losses induced by coastal and marine disasters fluctuated with no clear trend; the number of fatalities per year declined, and in relative terms both economic losses and fatalities decreased dramatically throughout time; (3) Substantial heterogeneity exists across the 11 provincial-level administrative regions in terms of the spatial pattern and temporal trends of coastal and marine hazards, exposure, vulnerability and observed impacts. Guangzhou, Fujian, Zhejiang and Hainan provinces experienced the highest direct economic losses and fatalities due to repeated typhoon-induced storm surges. The decline in adverse impacts caused by hazards is due to substantial progress in coastal and marine disaster prevention and migration in China, largely thanks to institutional measures, plus adaptation and mitigation actions at both national and regional levels. Coastal China still faces growing risks due to socio-economic development, climate change, as well as subsidence and new emerging marine disasters (e.g. green tides). Further management needs to promote integrated solutions across socio-economic development, disaster risk reduction and environmental conservation in coastal regions. This should happen at national and international levels as disasters can affect neighboring countries and their marine environments and socio-ecological systems. Lessons may be learnt from countries experiencing similar problems over the long-term.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 February 2017
Organisations: Energy & Climate Change Group, Civil Maritime & Env. Eng & Sci Unit

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 405477
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/405477
ISSN: 0964-5691
PURE UUID: a4ae6aa3-1c26-4cb3-a9da-176a7a560472
ORCID for Wei Liu: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4719-0345
ORCID for Sally Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1185-1962
ORCID for Robert Nicholls: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9715-1109

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Date deposited: 03 Feb 2017 16:25
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:58

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Contributors

Author: Jiayi Fang
Author: Wei Liu ORCID iD
Author: Saini Yang
Author: Sally Brown ORCID iD
Author: Robert Nicholls ORCID iD
Author: Jochen Hinkel
Author: Xianwu Shi
Author: Peijun Shi

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