Going beyond the flood insurance rate map: insights from flood hazard map co-production
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ID: 56225
2018
Flood hazard mapping in the United States (US) is deeply tied to the National
Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). Consequently, publicly available flood maps
provide essential information for insurance purposes, but they do not necessarily provide relevant information for non-insurance aspects of flood risk
management (FRM) such as public education and emergency planning. Recent
calls for flood hazard maps that support a wider variety of FRM tasks
highlight the need to deepen our understanding about the factors that make
flood maps useful and understandable for local end users. In this study,
social scientists and engineers explore opportunities for improving the
utility and relevance of flood hazard maps through the co-production of maps
responsive to end users' FRM needs. Specifically, two-dimensional flood
modeling produced a set of baseline hazard maps for stakeholders of the
Tijuana River valley, US, and Los Laureles Canyon in Tijuana, Mexico. Focus
groups with natural resource managers, city planners, emergency managers,
academia, non-profit, and community leaders refined the baseline hazard maps
by triggering additional modeling scenarios and map revisions. Several
important end user preferences emerged, such as (1) legends that frame flood
intensity both qualitatively and quantitatively, and (2) flood scenario
descriptions that report flood magnitude in terms of rainfall, streamflow,
and its relation to an historic event. Regarding desired hazard map content,
end users' requests revealed general consistency with mapping needs reported
in European studies and guidelines published in Australia. However, requested
map content that is not commonly produced included (1) standing water depths
following the flood, (2) the erosive potential of flowing water, and
(3) pluvial flood hazards, or flooding caused directly by rainfall.
We conclude that the relevance and utility of commonly produced flood hazard
maps can be most improved by illustrating pluvial flood hazards and by using
concrete reference points to describe flooding scenarios rather than
exceedance probabilities or frequencies.
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luke2018goingnatural
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Authors | Luke, A.;Sanders, B. F.;Sanders, B. F.;Goodrich, K. A.;Feldman, D. L.;Boudreau, D.;Eguiarte, A.;Serrano, K.;Reyes, A.;Schubert, J. E.;AghaKouchak, A.;Basolo, V.;Matthew, R. A.; |
Journal | natural hazards and earth system sciences |
Year | 2018 |
DOI | DOI not found |
URL | |
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