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Project

 
Flood Risk from Extreme Events (FREE) Logo

FREE - Uncertainty Assessments of Flood Inundation Impacts: Using spatial climate change scenarios to drive ensembles of distributed models for extremes

Status: completed
Publication State: published

Abstract

The Uncertainty Assessments of Flood Inundation Impacts: Using spatial climate change scenarios to drive ensembles of distributed models for extremes Project is a NERC Flood Risk for Extreme Events (FREE) Research Programme project (Round 1 - NE/E002242/1 - Duration December 2006 - Septembre 2010) led by Prof Glenn McGregor, King's College London. The data and metadata from this project will be stored at the NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH).

Abbreviation: free_uncertainty
Keywords: Not defined

Details

Keywords: Not defined
Previously used record identifiers:
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/view/badc.nerc.ac.uk__ATOM__ACTIVITY_1620534c-436d-11e1-9d07-00163e251233
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/view/badc.nerc.ac.uk__ATOM__dataent_1227541810226928

More Information (under review)


Introduction

Exploratory climate change studies for the UK indicate that an increase in the frequency of extreme events and associated flood risk is likely. Given that floods cause damage of over £1bn per year under present climatic conditions, climate change bears significant consequences for flood risk management. In order to evaluate these consequences, hydrological and flood inundation models are forced with projections of precipitation from atmospheric models for a range of Greenhouse gas emission scenarios to produce future flood predictions. However the validity and uncertainty of these model-based input precipitation fields are of key concern, as they potentially constitute a major source of ambiguity for hydrological and hydraulic modelling. Additionally, uncertainty is associated with the hydrological and inundation models themselves, such as for example the models ability to represent the dominating physical processes and to uniquely identify effective model factors (parameters and any other model variables) that will shape future forecasts. As the non-linear interaction of all model components will influence the total uncertainty associated with hydrological impact assessments these need to be comprehensively assessed. Therefore, a key and exciting challenge is to describe and quantify the origin and propagation of uncertainty from climate to hydrological to flood inundation models.

This project aims to develop a novel holistic modelling approach for doing this. The region of focus will be the River Severn catchment because of concerns about current and future flood risk. Specifically Project Investigators will:

  • (1) Quantify the "top-end" uncertainties associated with climate change hydrological impact assessments by analyzing precipitation fields produced by two contrasting methods and assess how these affect the nature of flood and inundation predictions
  • (2) Evaluate all uncertainties between and within a cascade modeling framework for flood inundation predictions in a fully coupled and dynamic way
  • (3) Use novel techniques of uncertainty analysis including global sensitivity analysis and a new efficient functional similarity sampling approach to enable an effective evaluation of the uncertainties in the modeling cascade.
  • (4) Assess the likely flood hazard change for the River Severn catchment over the next 100 years for various climate, landuse and soil moisture scenarios.

This project will deliver an insightful scientific methodology which can be used in future research assessments and catapult UK science to the forefront of an exciting, socially, and politically important international research area.

Project Duration: December 2006 - September 2010.

This project is funded by NERC - Grant Ref. NE/E002242/1 - through the Flood Risk for Extreme Events (FREE) NERC directed mode programme.


Availability of data

This project will create a framework to cascade climate models into hydrological and then into flood inundation models, and then assess the origin and propagation of uncertainty through this system. This study will be based on the region of the River Severn basin. In establishing this framework it is intended that observational data sets, namely rainfall and river flow data for the Severn basin will be used. If these are collected specifically by the project team (and not e.g. by the Environment agency) then they should be archived at the NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH).
In addition, notable output datasets generated by the climate and hydrological model runs may be archived, particularly if they are used in publications.

The data from this project will be stored at the NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH).


FREE Programme documentation:


Who to contact

This FREE project is headed by Prof Glenn McGregor of King's College London, with co-investigators at King's College London, University of Bristol, Lancaster University, University of Exeter.

The project data contact is Dr Hannah Cloke, King's College London.

General queries about these pages should be directed to the BADC support line.