3.9 Article

An Efficient Modeling Approach for Probabilistic Assessments of Present-Day and Future Fluvial Flooding

Journal

FRONTIERS IN CLIMATE
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fclim.2022.798618

Keywords

urban flood; surrogate model; 1D; 2D modeling; urban drainage; Mekong Delta; Vietnam

Funding

  1. IHE Delft Projects OPTIRISK
  2. DURA FR Research Fund
  3. AXA CCamp
  4. CR
  5. AXA Research Fund
  6. Deltares Strategic Research Programme Coastal and Offshore Engineering

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article presents an efficient probabilistic modeling approach for flood risk assessment in Can Tho city, Mekong Delta. The results show that a significant portion of the study area is currently at risk of flooding and future projections indicate a substantial increase in flood extent. However, the implementation of adaptation measures, such as limiting groundwater extraction and improving urban drainage, can mitigate the future flood hazards.
Risk-informed flood risk management requires a comprehensive and quantitative risk assessment, which often demands multiple (thousands of) river and flood model simulations. Performing such a large number of model simulations is a challenge, especially for large, complex river systems (e.g., Mekong) due to the associated computational and resource demands. This article presents an efficient probabilistic modeling approach that combines a simplified 1D hydrodynamic model for the entire Mekong Delta with a detailed 1D/2D coupled model and demonstrates its application at Can Tho city in the Mekong Delta. Probabilistic flood-hazard maps, ranging from 0.5 to 100 year return period events, are obtained for the urban center of Can Tho city under different future scenarios taking into account the impact of climate change forcing (river flow, sea-level rise, storm surge) and land subsidence. Results obtained under present conditions show that more than 12% of the study area is inundated by the present-day 100 year return period of water level. Future projections show that, if the present rate of land subsidence continues, by 2050 (under both RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5 climate scenarios), the 0.5 and 100 year return period flood extents will increase by around 15- and 8-fold, respectively, relative to the present-day flood extent. However, without land subsidence, the projected increases in the 0.5 and 100 year return period flood extents by 2050 (under RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5) are limited to between a doubling to tripling of the present-day flood extent. Therefore, adaptation measures that can reduce the rate of land subsidence (e.g., limiting groundwater extraction), would substantially mitigate future flood hazards in the study area. A combination of restricted groundwater extraction and the construction of a new and more efficient urban drainage network would facilitate even further reductions in the flood hazard. The projected 15-fold increase in flood extent projected by 2050 for the twice per year (0.5 year return period) flood event implies that the do nothing management approach is not a feasible option for Can Tho.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.9
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available