K. Macmanus, D. Balk, H. Engin, G. Mcgranahan, Rya Inman
{"title":"Estimating Population and Urban Areas at Risk of Coastal Hazards, 1990–2015: How data choices matter","authors":"K. Macmanus, D. Balk, H. Engin, G. Mcgranahan, Rya Inman","doi":"10.5194/essd-2021-165","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract. The accurate estimation of population living in the Low Elevation Coastal Zone (LECZ), and at heightened risk from sea level rise, is critically important for policy makers and risk managers worldwide. This characterization of potential exposure depends not only on robust representations of coastal elevation and spatial population data, but also of settlements along the urban-rural continuum. The empirical basis for LECZ estimation has improved considerably in the 13 years since it was first estimated that 10 % of the world’s population, and an even greater share of the urban population, lived in the LECZ (McGranahan et al., 2007). Those estimates were constrained in several ways, most notably by a single 10-meter LECZ, but also by a dichotomous urban-rural proxy and population from a single source. This paper updates those initial estimates with newer, improved inputs and provides a range of estimates, along with sensitivity analyses that reveal the importance of understanding the strengths and weaknesses of the underlying data. We estimate that between 750 million to nearly 1.1 billion persons globally, in 2015, live in the ≤ 10 m LECZ, with the variation depending on the elevation and population data sources used. The variations are considerably greater at more disaggregated levels, when finer elevation bands (e.g. the ≤ 5 m LECZ) or differing delineations between urban, quasi-urban and rural populations are considered. Despite these variations, there is general agreement that the LECZ is disproportionately home to urban dwellers, and that the urban population in the LECZ has grown more than urban areas outside the LECZ since 1990. We describe the main results across these new elevation, population, and urban proxy data sources in order to guide future research and improvements to characterizing risk in low elevation coastal zones. DOI: assigned upon completion of data peer-review.\n","PeriodicalId":326085,"journal":{"name":"Earth System Science Data Discussions","volume":"100 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"23","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Earth System Science Data Discussions","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2021-165","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 23
Abstract
Abstract. The accurate estimation of population living in the Low Elevation Coastal Zone (LECZ), and at heightened risk from sea level rise, is critically important for policy makers and risk managers worldwide. This characterization of potential exposure depends not only on robust representations of coastal elevation and spatial population data, but also of settlements along the urban-rural continuum. The empirical basis for LECZ estimation has improved considerably in the 13 years since it was first estimated that 10 % of the world’s population, and an even greater share of the urban population, lived in the LECZ (McGranahan et al., 2007). Those estimates were constrained in several ways, most notably by a single 10-meter LECZ, but also by a dichotomous urban-rural proxy and population from a single source. This paper updates those initial estimates with newer, improved inputs and provides a range of estimates, along with sensitivity analyses that reveal the importance of understanding the strengths and weaknesses of the underlying data. We estimate that between 750 million to nearly 1.1 billion persons globally, in 2015, live in the ≤ 10 m LECZ, with the variation depending on the elevation and population data sources used. The variations are considerably greater at more disaggregated levels, when finer elevation bands (e.g. the ≤ 5 m LECZ) or differing delineations between urban, quasi-urban and rural populations are considered. Despite these variations, there is general agreement that the LECZ is disproportionately home to urban dwellers, and that the urban population in the LECZ has grown more than urban areas outside the LECZ since 1990. We describe the main results across these new elevation, population, and urban proxy data sources in order to guide future research and improvements to characterizing risk in low elevation coastal zones. DOI: assigned upon completion of data peer-review.
摘要准确估计生活在低海拔海岸带(LECZ)并面临海平面上升高风险的人口,对全球政策制定者和风险管理人员至关重要。这种潜在暴露的特征不仅取决于沿海高程和空间人口数据的可靠表示,还取决于城乡连续体沿线的定居点。自首次估计世界10%的人口以及更大比例的城市人口居住在LECZ以来,13年来LECZ估计的经验基础有了很大改善(McGranahan et al., 2007)。这些估计受到几个方面的限制,最明显的是一个10米的LECZ,但也受到城乡二元代理和单一来源的人口的限制。本文用更新的、改进的输入更新了这些初始估计,并提供了一系列估计,以及揭示理解基础数据的优点和缺点的重要性的敏感性分析。我们估计,2015年,全球有7.5亿至近11亿人生活在海拔≤10米的低海拔区域,其差异取决于海拔高度和所使用的人口数据源。当考虑到更细的高程带(例如≤5米LECZ)或城市、准城市和农村人口之间的不同划分时,在更细分的水平上的变化要大得多。尽管存在这些差异,人们普遍认为LECZ是城市居民不成比例的家园,并且自1990年以来LECZ的城市人口增长超过LECZ以外的城市地区。我们描述了这些新的海拔、人口和城市代理数据源的主要结果,以指导未来的研究和改进,以表征低海拔沿海地区的风险。DOI:在完成数据同行评审后分配。