Abstract

Abstract. Managing flood risk in Europe is a critical issue because climate change is expected to increase flood hazard in many european countries. Beside climate change, land use evolution is also a key factor influencing future flood risk. The core contribution of this paper is a new methodology to model residential land use evolution. Based on two climate scenarios ("dry" and "wet"), the method is applied to study the evolution of flood damage by 2100 along the river Meuse. Nine urbanization scenarios were developed: three of them assume a "current trend" land use evolution, leading to a significant urban sprawl, while six others assume a dense urban development, characterized by a higher density and a higher diversity of urban functions in the urbanized areas. Using damage curves, the damage estimation was performed by combining inundation maps for the present and future 100 yr flood with present and future land use maps and specific prices. According to the dry scenario, the flood discharge is expected not to increase. In this case, land use changes increase flood damages by 1–40%, to €334–462 million in 2100. In the wet scenario, the relative increase in flood damage is 540–630%, corresponding to total damages of €2.1–2.4 billion. In this extreme scenario, the influence of climate on the overall damage is 3–8 times higher than the effect of land use change. However, for seven municipalities along the river Meuse, these two factors have a comparable influence. Consequently, in the "wet" scenario and at the level of the whole Meuse valley in the Walloon region, careful spatial planning would reduce the increase in flood damage by no more than 11–23%; but, at the level of several municipalities, more sustainable spatial planning would reduce future flood damage to a much greater degree.

Highlights

  • Climate change is expected to increase flood hazard across most of Europe, both in terms of peak discharge intensity and frequency (Dankers and Feyen, 2008; Kundzewicz, 2005)

  • Before describing the location of new residential areas according to the dense urban development” (DUD) scenarios, the following intermediate results are successively presented: the employment-related potential, and the potential maps for the two DUD scenarios, as well as an example of exclusion areas

  • The potential is much lower in the southeastern part of the Walloon region, along the French and German borders

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is expected to increase flood hazard across most of Europe, both in terms of peak discharge intensity and frequency (Dankers and Feyen, 2008; Kundzewicz, 2005). Flood risk can be defined as the combination of the probability of a flood event and its negative consequences (UNISDR, 2009). The latter are a function of the flood intensity, the exposure and the vulnerability. Exposure depends directly on land use, and, in this respect, climate change and land use evolution is a key influencing factor for the assessment of future flood damage

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