Litcius/Paper detail

Compound hazard mapping for tropical cyclone-induced concurrent wind and rainfall extremes over India

Ravi Ranjan, Subhankar Karmakar

2024npj natural hazards.26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract India is the worst affected region in the world by tropical cyclones (TCs), causing an average 2% annual GDP loss. TCs instigate many other natural hazards that have a compounding effect on the adversely affected population and present significant challenges to the resilience of emergency response systems and infrastructure. Hence, any risk assessment on TC is inherently multivariate/compound in nature. This study investigates co-occurring wind and rainfall extremes during TCs across India (1979–2020) using a novel quasi-Lagrangian approach, focusing on location-specific hazards. Eastern coastal states and adjacent inland areas experience the highest frequency (≥10 cyclones in 40 years) of concurrent extremes (wind gusts ≥ 16 m/s and rainfall ≥ 18 mm/h). Whereas duration-wise, the eastern coastal states and Gujarat state experience frequent concurrent extremes lasting more than a day annually, with the Krishna–Godavari delta region particularly vulnerable to highly severe events (duration of concurrent extremes ≥ 24 h). This study provides a high-resolution cartographic product of compound hazard from TC-induced extremes for the first time over the entire India, highlighting regional heterogeneity and aiding targeted national-level risk mitigation and adaptation planning.

Topics & Concepts

Tropical cycloneClimatologyGeographyHazardNatural hazardEnvironmental scienceNatural disasterTropical cyclone scalesPopulationCyclone (programming language)Physical geographyMeteorologyEcologyGeologyEnvironmental healthEngineeringMedicineEmbedded systemField-programmable gate arrayBiologyTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchOcean Waves and Remote SensingClimate variability and models