Abstract

Abstract. Surface water floods (SWFs) have received increasing attention in the recent years. Nevertheless, we still know relatively little about where, when and why such floods occur and cause damage, largely due to a lack of data but to some degree also because of terminological ambiguities. Therefore, in a preparatory step, we summarize related terms and identify the need for unequivocal terminology across disciplines and international boundaries in order to bring the science together. Thereafter, we introduce a large (n = 63 117), long (10–33 years) and representative (48 % of all Swiss buildings covered) data set of spatially explicit Swiss insurance flood claims. Based on registered flood damage to buildings, the main aims of this study are twofold: First, we introduce a method to differentiate damage caused by SWFs and fluvial floods based on the geographical location of each damaged object in relation to flood hazard maps and the hydrological network. Second, we analyze the data with respect to their spatial and temporal distributions aimed at quantitatively answering the fundamental questions of how relevant SWF damage really is, as well as where and when it occurs in space and time. This study reveals that SWFs are responsible for at least 45 % of the flood damage to buildings and 23 % of the associated direct tangible losses, whereas lower losses per claim are responsible for the lower loss share. The Swiss lowlands are affected more heavily by SWFs than the alpine regions. At the same time, the results show that the damage claims and associated losses are not evenly distributed within each region either. Damage caused by SWFs occurs by far most frequently in summer in almost all regions. The normalized SWF damage of all regions shows no significant upward trend between 1993 and 2013. We conclude that SWFs are in fact a highly relevant process in Switzerland that should receive similar attention like fluvial flood hazards. Moreover, as SWF damage almost always coincides with fluvial flood damage, we suggest considering SWFs, like fluvial floods, as integrated processes of our catchments.

Highlights

  • In Switzerland, there seems to be a growing awareness that just as overtopping rivers and lakes pose substantial flood risks for society, so too does flooding that takes place far away from watercourses

  • We present the spatial distribution of surface water floods (SWFs) damage (Sect. 4.3) and show how the damage evolved within the last 20 years (Sect. 4.4)

  • Note that in the following damage claims classified as A or B, i.e., likely surface water floods, are regarded as damage caused by SWFs, if not stated otherwise

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Summary

Introduction

In Switzerland, there seems to be a growing awareness that just as overtopping rivers and lakes pose substantial flood risks for society, so too does flooding that takes place far away from watercourses. All across Europe, there are wellknown examples of such inland flood events. On the same day in 2014, the Dutch capital Amsterdam (e.g., Gaitan et al, 2016; Spekkers et al, 2017) and Münster, Germany, experienced substantial flooding (Spekkers et al, 2017). These events in Europe share a common thread, which stems from their origin as inland floods, triggered by heavy precipitation, but are mostly unrelated to watercourses

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