Abstract

AbstractIn view of globally increasing flood losses, a significantly improved and more efficient flood risk management and adaptation policy are needed. One prerequisite is reliable risk assessments on the continental scale. Flood loss modeling and risk assessments for Europe are until now based on regional approaches using deterministic depth‐damage functions. Uncertainties associated with the risk estimation are hardly known. To reduce these shortcomings, we present a novel, consistent approach for probabilistic flood loss modeling for Europe, based on the upscaling of the Bayesian Network Flood Loss Estimation MOdel for the private sector, BN‐FLEMOps. The model is applied on the mesoscale in the whole of Europe and can be adapted to regional situations. BN‐FLEMOps is validated in three case studies in Italy, Austria, and Germany. The officially reported loss figures of the past flood events are within the 95% quantile range of the probabilistic loss estimation, for all three case studies. In the Italian, Austrian, and German case studies, the median loss estimate shows an overestimation by 28% (2.1 million euro) and 305% (5.8 million euro) and an underestimation by 43% (104 million euro), respectively. In two of the three case studies, the performance of the model improved, when updated with empirical damage data from the area of interest. This approach represents a step forward in European wide flood risk modeling, since it delivers consistent flood loss estimates and inherently provides uncertainty information. Further validation and tests with respect to adapting the model to different European regions are recommended.

Highlights

  • Floods are a global hazard with high socioeconomic impacts

  • The objective of this study is to develop a consistent approach for probabilistic flood loss modeling for residential buildings in Europe, which is based on the upscaling of the microscale multivariable flood loss model Bayesian Network ‐ Flood Loss Estimation MOdel for the private sector (BN‐FLEMOps) presented in Wagenaar et al (2018)

  • The building area variable in the mesoscale application of BN‐FLEMOps is sampled from the distribution of building footprint areas per NUTS‐3 region, while the median value is solely used to present the European data set on the map

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Summary

Introduction

In Europe, floods caused about 1,000 fatalities and 52 billion euro overall losses between 1998 and 2009 (EEA, 2010). The flood in central Europe in 2002 caused the largest economic losses with over 20 billion euro (EEA, 2010). The basis of efficient flood risk management is a reliable risk assessment on various spatial scales (de Moel et al, 2015; Merz et al, 2010). European wide flood risk assessments are essential for governments to support climate change adaptation policies (Van Renssen, 2013) and to manage the European Union solidarity fund (Hochrainer et al, 2010). Risk analyses combine flood hazard modeling with loss modeling and provide quantitative estimates of expected flood losses in monetary terms

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