Abstract

Traditional approaches to flood risk management assume flood events follow an independent, identically distributed (i.i.d.) random process from which static risk measures are computed. Modern risk accounting strategies also consider nonstationarity or long-term trends in the mean and moments of the associated flood probability distributions. However, few approaches consider how extreme hydroclimatic events cluster in both space and time, compounding damage risks. Here we introduce a compound flood risk simulator that models and conditionally forecasts future variability in regional flooding events that cluster in time, given trends and oscillations in a variable climate signal. A modular, novel integration of wavelet signal processing, nonstationary time series forecasting, k-nearest neighbor (KNN) bootstrapping, multivariate copulas, and modified Neyman-Scott (NS) event clustering process provides users the ability to model interannual and sub-annual clustering of flood risk. Our semi-parametric flood generator specifically targets the clustered temporal dynamics of jointly modeled flood intensity, duration, and frequency over a finite future period of a decade or more, thereby providing a foundation for adaptation approaches that integrate temporally clustered flood risk into planning, response and recovery.

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