4.6 Article

US tropical cyclone flood risk: Storm surge versus freshwater

期刊

RISK ANALYSIS
卷 42, 期 12, 页码 2748-2764

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/risa.13890

关键词

flood damage; flood insurance; tropical cyclone

资金

  1. Willis Research Network

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Despite the high flood losses caused by tropical cyclones, the United States is still insufficiently prepared for such events, with a lack of residential flood insurance being a major issue. By analyzing residential flood claim data from 2001 to 2014, this study reveals that freshwater flooding, rather than storm surge flooding, is the main driver of claims and damages. These findings highlight the need to address both freshwater and storm surge flood risk and to adjust flood insurance premiums based on individual circumstances.
Despite persistent record-breaking flood losses from tropical cyclones (TCs), the United States continues to be inadequately prepared for TC flood events, with the deficiency in residential flood insurance being a prime representation of this. One way to address this is through a better quantification of TC flood risk including variations associated with freshwater versus storm surge flood hazard and damage. We analyze actual residential flood claim data from the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) for the full set of all 28 significant US landfalling TC-related flood events from 2001 to 2014 which we split by storm surge and freshwater. We illustrate key differences between the numbers of claims, paid claim amounts, and damage for freshwater and surge claims, as well as evaluate differences associated with flood zone, state, TC event, and flood depth. Despite the typical focus on surge TC flooding, freshwater flooding accounts for over 60% of TC paid claim and damage amounts. Surge flooding often occurs outside of high-velocity flood zones, which is not reflected in the NFIP premiums. Statistical analysis indicates that depth-damage ratios vary significantly by surge versus freshwater and by geography. State-level analysis shows that land-use policies and building codes likely affect differences in damage along with storm characteristics and geography. The findings highlight the need to mitigate and manage both freshwater and surge TC flood risk and for more individualized flood insurance premiums less tied to flood zone. It appears that the latter need may be addressed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)'s Risk Rating 2.0.

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