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Developing a holistic approach to assessing and managing coastal flood risk

Developing a holistic approach to assessing and managing coastal flood risk
Developing a holistic approach to assessing and managing coastal flood risk
It is increasingly recognized that a comprehensive understanding of the existing flood system is necessary to effectively manage coastal flood risk. This involves consideration of the social and ecological dimensions in addition to the hydrological aspects that have been the traditional focus of flood analysis. Social aspects are important, as they represent both the reason for flood management and the growth in exposure, as well as providing the context within which any decision will be made. Coastal species and habitats are inherently important for the flood management ecosystem services that they provide for flood management. The flood flow, depth, and extent determine the potential for flood damage. The conceptual model adopted here for coastal risk assessment is based on the Source-Pathway-Receptor-Consequence model, which is a simple linear conceptual model for representing flood systems and processes that lead to a particular flooding consequence. This approach is being used to evaluate how the Sources (waves, tides, storm surge, mean sea level, river discharge, run-off), through the Pathways (including coastal defenses), affect the Receptors (inland system), generating economic, social, and environmental Consequences. Collectively, this more holistic analysis of the flood system can identify likely trends in flood risk and the wide range of potential mitigation options embracing engineering, ecological, or socioeconomic measures, including hybrid combined approaches.
coastal flood system, risk assessment, risk management, source-pathway-receptor-consequence model
978-0-12-397310-8
9-53
Butterworth-Heinemann
Nicholls, R.J.
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Zanuttigh, B.
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Vanderlinden, J.-P.
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Weisse, R.
07afa77b-2f58-40f3-9457-a6d62568ff78
Silva, R.
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Hanson, S.
dc079588-5eb2-4177-8df5-01fa493d8c16
Narayan, S.
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Hoggart, S.
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Thompson, R.C.
d632e905-6f51-49a0-9426-13c42c3d0a18
de Vries, W.
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Koundouri, P.
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Nicholls, R.J.
4ce1e355-cc5d-4702-8124-820932c57076
Zanuttigh, B.
ff9e26ff-1751-4502-a1fe-2cddcd2b7add
Vanderlinden, J.-P.
9f5ffd8f-2a97-484f-989e-36e288c82503
Weisse, R.
07afa77b-2f58-40f3-9457-a6d62568ff78
Silva, R.
a173704b-e7c7-4f36-910d-ab2dac44118c
Hanson, S.
dc079588-5eb2-4177-8df5-01fa493d8c16
Narayan, S.
cfa550cc-d989-4240-b821-2c9ce7d037c3
Hoggart, S.
2c0a1bf6-966e-4f46-a87c-340995796b44
Thompson, R.C.
d632e905-6f51-49a0-9426-13c42c3d0a18
de Vries, W.
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Koundouri, P.
32c5647e-1200-4d62-95e2-79d54ced7b1c

Nicholls, R.J., Zanuttigh, B., Vanderlinden, J.-P., Weisse, R., Silva, R., Hanson, S., Narayan, S., Hoggart, S., Thompson, R.C., de Vries, W. and Koundouri, P. (2015) Developing a holistic approach to assessing and managing coastal flood risk. In, Coastal Risk Management in a Changing Climate. Oxford, GB. Butterworth-Heinemann, pp. 9-53. (doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-397310-8.00002-6).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

It is increasingly recognized that a comprehensive understanding of the existing flood system is necessary to effectively manage coastal flood risk. This involves consideration of the social and ecological dimensions in addition to the hydrological aspects that have been the traditional focus of flood analysis. Social aspects are important, as they represent both the reason for flood management and the growth in exposure, as well as providing the context within which any decision will be made. Coastal species and habitats are inherently important for the flood management ecosystem services that they provide for flood management. The flood flow, depth, and extent determine the potential for flood damage. The conceptual model adopted here for coastal risk assessment is based on the Source-Pathway-Receptor-Consequence model, which is a simple linear conceptual model for representing flood systems and processes that lead to a particular flooding consequence. This approach is being used to evaluate how the Sources (waves, tides, storm surge, mean sea level, river discharge, run-off), through the Pathways (including coastal defenses), affect the Receptors (inland system), generating economic, social, and environmental Consequences. Collectively, this more holistic analysis of the flood system can identify likely trends in flood risk and the wide range of potential mitigation options embracing engineering, ecological, or socioeconomic measures, including hybrid combined approaches.

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More information

Published date: 2015
Keywords: coastal flood system, risk assessment, risk management, source-pathway-receptor-consequence model
Organisations: Energy & Climate Change Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 376682
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/376682
ISBN: 978-0-12-397310-8
PURE UUID: df839074-060d-40b7-85c9-b750c97809a6
ORCID for R.J. Nicholls: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9715-1109

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Date deposited: 13 May 2015 15:26
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:18

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Contributors

Author: R.J. Nicholls ORCID iD
Author: B. Zanuttigh
Author: J.-P. Vanderlinden
Author: R. Weisse
Author: R. Silva
Author: S. Hanson
Author: S. Narayan
Author: S. Hoggart
Author: R.C. Thompson
Author: W. de Vries
Author: P. Koundouri

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