Coastal Risk Assessment studies: The problem of the scales through 3 examples Borja G. Reguero gonzalezrb@unican.es / breguero@ucsc.edu.

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Coastal Risk Assessment studies:

The problem of the scales through 3 examples

Borja G. Reguero gonzalezrb@unican.es / breguero@ucsc.edu

National / International e.g., LAC

Spatial scales in the coastal areas:

0.50º ~ 50 Km = Global (Low Resolution, LR)0.05º ~ 5 Km = Regional (Medium Resolution, MR)10 m – 100 m = Local (High Resolution, HR)

MR

LR

LR HR

Local sitee.g., city

Country / regione.g. Gulf Coast, US

3 scales

Data + detail/resolution of processes

Case 1. The Macro Scale: e.g., Latin America and the Caribbean

Case 2. The Micro Scale: e.g., The city of Santander (SP)

Case 3. The Meso Scale: e.g., Gulf Coast

Case 1. The Macro Scale: e.g., Latin America and the Caribbean

Case 2. The Micro Scale: e.g., The city of Santander (SP)

Case 3. The Meso Scale: e.g., Gulf Coast

“ Identifying priorities“(process-integrated approach)

Hazard value

Vulnerability

Exposure

( )zf z

Risk (R) is defined as “the probability of harmful consequences or expected losses resulting from a given hazard to a given element at danger or peril,

over a specified time period”

European Commission terminology (Schneiderbauer and Ehrlich, 2004)

(Natural Disasters)

Regional study on the effects of Climate Change in the coast of Latin America and the Caribbean

f Z(z) Pi=Prob(zi-1<Z<zi)

zzi-1z0 z1 zi zn-1 zn... ...

EiVi

E(z)

V(z)

Regional study on the effects of Climate Change in the coast of Latin America and the Caribbean

Hazards

(Dynamics &

Impacts)

• Waves• Storm surge• Sea Level Rise• Sea Surface Temperature• Surface Air Temperature• Salinity•…

Exposure & Vulnerability

• Distribution of population• Land uses and surface affected• Coastal typology (beach characteristics, coastal defense, port facilities, city sea border)• Ecosystems clasification • Ecological vulnerability indices• Infrastructures (Roads & Railways)• …

Risk

• Coastal flooding• Beach erosion (Tourism and coastal protection) • Port (operability and reliability)• Coral Bleaching• …

• Coastal Flooding• Beach Erosion• Port activity and reliability• Coral Bleaching• Sediment potential transport• Eolic potential transport

Dynamics Impacts

Example of Risk integration 2: Reliability of Defensive Breakwaters

Type of sea-port as a function of its socio-economic relevance

Hazard Exposure Vulnerability

Length to repair

Change in design probability level

Case 1. The Macro Scale: e.g., Latin America and the Caribbean

Case 2. The Micro Scale: e.g., The city of Santander (SP)

Case 3. The Meso Scale: e.g., Gulf Coast

“ Going to the detail “(process based approach)

DSS-Santander follows the SPRC methodology (Source, Pathway, Receptor, Consequences)

R

f(R)• change vulnerability• change hazard

Case 1. The Macro Scale: e.g., Latin America and the Caribbean

Case 2. The Micro Scale: e.g., The city of Santander (SP)

Case 3. The Meso Scale: e.g., Gulf Coast

CLIMADAHazard Sets Scenarios

W Precip.SSHs

Atmospheric hazardsCoastal hazards

pFH

pFH inshore

Wave attenuation model (InVest Coastal Protection tool)

Coastal profile

pFH

pFH insh.

Ecosystems

protective services

Cost/Benefit of adaptation measures

NOTES:

First order of complexity (1D) Statistical simulation Additional advances:

SWAN-Veg Adcirc VOF-RANS runs

Damages, Events Losses SetsImpacts on assets

Storm generation

1. Databases

1. Hazard data (hurricanes and LT trends)2. Bathymetry & topography3. Types of ecosystems, coastal defenses and coastal

profiles 4. Socio-economic Vulnerability data (population,

coastal assets, etc.)

www.coastalresilience.orgwww.unisys.com www.nooa.com ….

1. Databases

2. Generation of Hazard sets (Wind, precip., SS, Waves)

1. Databases

2. Generation of Hazard sets (Wind, precip., SS, Waves)

3. Coastal features and possible adaptation options (role of green/gray infrastructure)

1. Databases

2. Generation of Hazard sets (Wind, precip., SS, Waves)

3. Coastal features and possible measures (role of green/gray infrastructure)

4. Evaluation of potential damages and overall risk

e.g. USGS, CVIComparison of each scenario:

1. Current situation2. Economic growth scenario3. Scenarios with future changes in (i)

hazards, (ii) ecosystems and/or (iii) measures adopted

Summary

Each scale presents different features (i.e. data) and requires

different tools

Processes-integrated vs Processes-resolving tools

Overall, a similar approach = Risk Framework

By comparison of scenarios (risk together with the other terms):

identify where and (possibly) what “solutions” to study

further

Thank you

I.J. Losada F.J. Méndez

Borja G. Reguero gonzalezrb@unican.es

Sources of pictures in the presentation: TNC, NOAA, USACE, USGS, Swiss Re, online press

Acknowledgements: ECLAC, OECC-SP Gob., NOAA, TNC, NatCap

M. BeckC. Sheppard

Example of risk integration 1: Erosion Risk (Sandy Beaches)

Beaches as a resource Urban beaches as a natural protection

2 functions:

Coastal Urban areas protection Resource (Tourism)

00

h

h

h

t

t t

t

R

R R

R a

Present

Pathway

Risk

Source

Receptor

Ecological

Socioeconomical

otR

( , ), ( , )ECON ECOLV z t V z t0( , )Zf z t

Hazard

Vulnerability

0 2010t Scenario 2025,2055,2085ht

Pathway

Source

Receptor

( , )Z hf z t

Hazard

RiskhtR

Do nothing0

0h

h

h

t

t t

t

R

R R

R a

Mitigationoption

0t t ht t

R

f(R)

• change vulnerability• change hazard

V(z)

f(z)

Risk Assessment in a changing climate

( ) ( ) ( ) ,ZR f z E z V z dz

SourcesPathways

Receptors & Consequences

INPUTS OUTPUTSFUNCTION

hs, tp, wave_dir, eta_ast, eta_met - offshore_to_coast - hs, tp, wave_dir, eta,depth, vel_x, vel_yhs, tp, wave_dir, eta_ast, eta_met, bathy_dir,… - beach- xb, hs, q_long, v_long, dean_par,depthhs, tp,wave_dir, eta, bathy_dir, h_ini, h_end - shoal- hs, wave_dirhs, eta, hc, length - sea_wall- q

FLOODING MODELdepth, population, patrimonial_value - inland_consequences- loss_life, edrvel_x, vel_y, habitat_id - outland_consequences- evi

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