1 / 22

Challenges in Assessing Socio-Economic Impacts of SLR

Challenges in Assessing Socio-Economic Impacts of SLR. Nassos Vafeidis. with contributions from G. Kaiser, B. Neumann and J. Hinkel. Outline. SLR and Impacts Metrics/methods for assessing SLR s-e impacts Methodological, scale- and data-related issues: Population, Elevation, GDP

sun
Download Presentation

Challenges in Assessing Socio-Economic Impacts of SLR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Challenges in Assessing Socio-Economic Impacts of SLR Nassos Vafeidis • with contributions from G. Kaiser, B. Neumann and J. Hinkel

  2. Outline SLR and Impacts Metrics/methods for assessing SLR s-e impacts Methodological, scale- and data-related issues: Population, Elevation, GDP Ideas & future needs EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  3. Global Mean SLR Sea Level Rise SRES Scenarios 2000 to 2100 (Source: Nicholls and Cazenave, 2010) Vermeer and Rahmstorf (2009) Rahmstorf (2007) Grinsted et al. (2009) EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  4. Main Biophysical Effects Coastal Impacts The main biophysical effects of relative sea level rise Displacement of costal lowlands and wetlands Mangroves, Thailand Coastal erosion at Happisburgh, UK in 2009 (2) Coastal flooding, New York (1) Increased coastal erosion Increased flooding (frequency and depth) SLR Saltwater intrusion (in surface- and groundwaters) Others Rio de la Plata, Argentina (3) (1) http://www.erh.noaa.gov/okx/images/coastal.jpg (2) www.happisburgh.org.uk/press/edp060209.html (3) http://veimages.gsfc.nasa.gov/4874/Argentina.A2003026.1730.250m.jpg EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  5. Area Exposure – Global Scale Areas below 10m of elevation EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  6. Assessing Socio-Economic Impacts Population and Area Exposure: Global to Regional Scales Nightlights, ORL Area: First-order assessment using elevation data No protection/adaptation is considered: Worst-case impacts Population density / counts (global datasets), combined with information on elevation EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  7. Assessing socio-economic Impacts DIVA Results Hinkel et al., 2010 People flooded under the A2 scenario without adaptation in 2100 People per country flooded & forced to migrate due to erosion under the A2 scenario, w/o adaptation, in 2100 EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  8. Area Exposure Areas below 10m of elevation EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  9. Hydrological Connectivity Hydrologically connected areas Hydrological connectivity not considered EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  10. Input Data Lichter et al., In Press • Estimates of area and population exposure depend heavily on the datasets that are employed for the analyses • Differences up to 150% in area estimates, around 10% for population for low elevations • Differences become smaller with higher elevations EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  11. Resolution of DEMs Aster orig (30m), MFC orig/ corrected (1m), SRTM orig, corr (90m) EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  12. Surface Models vs Corrected Models DSM – Digital Surface Model DEM – Digital Elevation Model (corrected) EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  13. Elevation Data Tendency to use high-resolution datasets These, do not always provide the best information Combine datasets, depending on the case study? EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  14. Inundation Modelling Local Scale EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  15. Inundation Modelling Local Scale Flux Changes in water flux and inundated area. Large differences, depending on parameterisation Detailed inundation models offer a high degree of precision but are subject to severe limitations regarding their use at regional and global scales EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  16. Population Data (http://www.joelertola.com/grfx/index.html) Distribution of population Ambient population Time is important at night... ...and by day EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  17. People exposure Improved population distribution using • Land use classification • Census data • Information schools, hotels, hospitals, etc., survey Methods for distributing people: • Dasymetric mapping • Distribution of the people according to land use classes Scenarios: night, day, season EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  18. Economic Impacts DIVA Results Hinkel et al., 2010 Adaptation cost in 2100, under A2 Damage costs under A2 in 2100, w/o adaptation EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  19. Economic Impacts DIVA Results Hinkel et al., accepted Annual damage cost per country per year in 2100 w/o adaptation (left) and with adaptation: Rahmstorf BAU scenario Absolute (left) and annual adaptation cost in 2100 Countries are ranked as to their values under the Rahmstorf BAU scenario EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  20. GDP Data (http://gecon.yale.edu/large-pixeled-contour-globe) GDP density: Difficult to process globally Resolution still coarse compared to global population& elevation data EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  21. Conclusions Scale and methods of analysis and use of data are inter-related issues A great deal of effort and resources are required for improving global and regional datasets Data should be employed with caution Methods exist for improving existing data and should be applied whenever possible EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

  22. Thank you for your attention Nassos Vafeidis “Coastal Risks and Sea-Level Rise” Research Group, Institute of Geography, Future Ocean Excellence Cluster, Christian-Albrechts University Kiel, Germany vafeidis@geographie.uni-kiel.de http://www.crslr.uni-kiel.de EEA Meeting, Copenhagen

More Related