JOURNAL ARTICLE

National‐Scale Flood Hazard Data Unfit for Urban Risk Management

Jochen E. SchubertKatharine J. MachBrett F. Sanders

Year: 2024 Journal:   Earth s Future Vol: 12 (7)   Publisher: American Geophysical Union

Abstract

Abstract Extreme flooding events are becoming more frequent and costly, and impacts have been concentrated in cities where exposure and vulnerability are both heightened. To manage risks, governments, the private sector, and households now rely on flood hazard data from national‐scale models that lack accuracy in urban areas due to unresolved drainage processes and infrastructure. Here we assess the uncertainties of First Street Foundation (FSF) flood hazard data, available across the U.S., using a new model (PRIMo‐Drain) that resolves drainage infrastructure and fine resolution drainage dynamics. Using the case of Los Angeles, California, we find that FSF and PRIMo‐Drain estimates of population and property value exposed to 1%‐ and 5%‐annual‐chance hazards diverge at finer scales of governance, for example, by 4‐ to 18‐fold at the municipal scale. FSF and PRIMo‐Drain data often predict opposite patterns of exposure inequality across social groups (e.g., Black, White, Disadvantaged). Further, at the county scale, we compute a Model Agreement Index of only 24%—a ∼1 in 4 chance of models agreeing upon which properties are at risk. Collectively, these differences point to limited capacity of FSF data to confidently assess which municipalities, social groups, and individual properties are at risk of flooding within urban areas. These results caution that national‐scale model data at present may misinform urban flood risk strategies and lead to maladaptation, underscoring the importance of refined and validated urban models.

Keywords:
Flood myth Flooding (psychology) Geography Urbanization Hazard Vulnerability (computing) Scale (ratio) Flood mitigation Natural hazard Population Social vulnerability Environmental planning Environmental science Environmental resource management Water resource management Psychological resilience Cartography Economics Economic growth Computer science Meteorology Environmental health

Metrics

18
Cited By
9.75
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
52
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Flood Risk Assessment and Management
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change
Hydrology and Drought Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change
Urban Stormwater Management Solutions
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Environmental Engineering
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