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Toward a more effective hurricane hazard communication

Jae Yeol Song, Atieh Alipour, Hamed Moftakhari, Hamid Moradkhani

2020Environmental Research Letters39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Tropical cyclones are among the most devastating natural disasters that pose risk to people and assets all around the globe. The Saffir-Simpson scale is commonly used to inform threatened communities about the severity of hazard, but lacks consideration of other potential drivers of a hazardous situation (e.g. terrestrial and coastal flooding). Here, we propose an alternative approach that accounts for multiple components and their likelihood of coincidence for appropriate characterization of hurricane hazard. We assess the marginal and joint probability of wind-speed and rainfall from landfalling Atlantic tropical cyclones in the United States between 1979 ∼ 2017 to characterize the hazard associated with these events. We then integrate the vulnerability of affected communities to have a better depiction of risk that is comparable to the actual cost of these hurricanes. Our results show that the multihazard indexing approach significantly better characterizes the hurricane hazard, and is more appropriate for risk-informed decision-making.

Topics & Concepts

HazardTropical cycloneNatural hazardEnvironmental scienceVulnerability (computing)Atlantic hurricaneThreatened speciesWind speedFlooding (psychology)Coastal floodEnvironmental resource managementMeteorologyComputer scienceClimatologyGeographyClimate changeComputer securityOceanographyGeologyEcologyPsychologySea level riseBiologyHabitatPsychotherapistTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementDisaster Management and Resilience
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