Abstract

Estimating economic losses caused on buildings and other civil engineering works due to flooding events is often a difficult task. The accuracy of the estimate is affected by the availability of detailed data regarding the return period of the flooding event, vulnerability of exposed assets, and type of economy run in the affected area. This paper aims to provide a quantitative methodology for the assessment of economic losses associated with flood scenarios. The proposed methodology was performed for an urban area in Southern Italy prone to hydrogeological instabilities. At first, the main physical characteristics of the area such as rainfall, land use, permeability, roughness, and slopes of the area under investigation were estimated in order to obtain input for flooding simulations. Afterwards, the analysis focused on the spatial variability incidence of the rainfall parameters in flood events. The hydraulic modeling provided different flood hazard scenarios. The risk curve obtained by plotting economic consequences vs. the return period for each hazard scenario can be a useful tool for local authorities to identify adequate risk mitigation measures and therefore prioritize the economic resources necessary for the implementation of such mitigation measures.

Highlights

  • Flooding events can affect the lives of many communities, especially by damaging their assets.According to records the frequency of such events is increasing worldwide, and flooding events often cause economic losses greater than other natural disasters [1]

  • Imagery (RSI) have recently been adopted for the analysis of river basin behavior during flooding events in order to improve the extraction of land use factors [4]

  • The accuracy of the estimate is affected by the availability of detailed data regarding the return period of the flooding event, vulnerability of exposed assets, and type of economy run in the affected area

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Summary

Introduction

According to records the frequency of such events is increasing worldwide, and flooding events often cause economic losses greater than other natural disasters [1]. The economic losses due to hydrological events, i.e., floods and mass movements constituted by soil and debris, was estimated to be around EUR 165 billion (in 2015 EUR values) among all EU member countries over the period of 1980–2015. This estimate represents one-third of the total economic losses due to natural disasters for all EU member countries [5]

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