利用各种减少灾害风险措施降低全球沿海洪水风险的潜力

E. Mortensen, T. Tiggeloven, T. Haer, Bas van Bemmel, D. Le Bars, S. Muis, D. Eilander, F. Sperna Weiland, A. Bouwman, W. Ligtvoet, P. Ward
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要沿海洪水风险是今世后代面临的一项严峻的全球性挑战。一些减少灾害风险 (DRR) 的措施被认为是减少沿海洪水有害影响的方法。然而,在全球范围内,对减灾措施(除结构性措施外)的未来影响进行建模的工作十分有限。在本文中,我们利用全球尺度的洪水风险模型来估算沿海洪水的风险,并评估和比较各种减灾措施的效果和经济效益,这些措施包括堤坝和沿海防洪堤、城市资产的防干措施、洪水易发区的分区限制以及前滨植被管理。为了评估每种减灾措施的功效,我们确定了这些措施能在多大程度上将未来洪水风险占地区 GDP 的百分比限制在与现在相同的比例值("相对风险不变 "目标)。为了评估这些措施的经济效益,我们估算了实施每项措施的经济效益和成本。如果不采取任何减少灾害风险的措施来减轻未来的沿海洪水风险,我们估计到 2080 年,预计每年的损失将超过 1.3 万亿美元,每年直接影响约 1150 万人。低端和高端情景显示了巨大的影响不确定性范围,尤其是在低收入地区。在全球范围内,我们发现堤坝和海岸防洪堤在实现相对风险恒定目标方面的功效为 98%,干防为 49%,分区限制为 11%,前滩植被为 6%。就直接成本而言,防旱(1,510 亿美元)、堤坝和海岸防洪堤(860 亿美元)的总成本最高,远高于分区限制(2,700 万美元)和海岸植被(3.66 亿美元)。这两种成本较高的减灾措施也显示出最大的潜在直接成本范围。虽然分区限制和海岸植被的全球效益成本比(BCR)最高,但它们带来的总体效益也最小。我们的研究表明,模拟的减少灾害风险措施在功效和经济效益方面都有很大的区域性,这些措施在减少洪水风险方面具有很大的潜力,尤其是在预计人口将大量增长的地区。如果采用至少一种经调查的减灾措施,世界上超过 90% 的国家以下地区都能实现其相对风险不变目标。未来的研究可以评估这四种措施和其他减灾措施的间接成本和效益,以及它们随后的混合效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The potential of global coastal flood risk reduction using various DRR measures
Abstract. Coastal flood risk is a serious global challenge facing current and future generations. Several disaster risk reduction (DRR) measures have been posited as ways to reduce the deleterious impacts of coastal flooding. On a global scale, however, efforts to model the future effects of DRR measures (beyond structural) are limited. In this paper, we use a global-scale flood risk model to estimate the risk of coastal flooding and to assess and compare the efficacy and economic performance of various DRR measures, namely dykes and coastal levees, dry-proofing of urban assets, zoning restrictions in flood-prone areas, and management of foreshore vegetation. To assess the efficacy of each DRR measure, we determine the extent to which it can limit future flood risk as a percentage of regional GDP to the same proportional value as today (a “relative risk constant” objective). To assess their economic performance, we estimate the economic benefits and costs of implementing each measure. If no DRR measures are implemented to mitigate future coastal flood risk, we estimate expected annual damages to exceed USD 1.3 trillion by 2080, directly affecting an estimated 11.5 million people on an annual basis. Low- and high-end scenarios reveal large ranges of impact uncertainty, especially in lower-income regions. On a global scale, we find the efficacy of dykes and coastal levees in achieving the relative risk constant objective to be 98 %, of dry-proofing to be 49 %, of zoning restrictions to be 11 %, and of foreshore vegetation to be 6 %. In terms of direct costs, the overall figure is largest for dry-proofing (USD 151 billion) and dykes and coastal levees (USD 86 billion), much more than those of zoning restrictions (USD 27 million) and foreshore vegetation (USD 366 million). These two more expensive DRR measures also exhibit the largest potential range of direct costs. While zoning restrictions and foreshore vegetation achieve the highest global benefit–cost ratios (BCRs), they also provide the smallest magnitude of overall benefit. We show that there are large regional patterns in both the efficacy and economic performance of modelled DRR measures that display much potential for flood risk reduction, especially in regions of the world that are projected to experience large amounts of population growth. Over 90 % of sub-national regions in the world can achieve their relative risk constant targets if at least one of the investigated DRR measures is employed. While future research could assess the indirect costs and benefits of these four and other DRR measures, as well as their subsequent hybridization, here we demonstrate to global and regional decision makers the case for investing in DRR now to mitigate future coastal flood risk.
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