Managing the flooding system's resiliency to climate change
- 1. Department of Water Engineering, UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water EducationDelftThe Netherlands
- 2. Professor, Department of Water Engineering, UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water EducationDelftThe Netherlands
- 3. Department of Urban Water and Sanitation, UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water EducationDelftThe Netherlands
- 4. Department of Water Engineering, UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education, Delft, The Netherlands and Department of Hydraulic Engineering, Delft University of TechnologyDelftThe Netherlands
Description
An increasing lack of stationarity in environmental phenomena and hence in the predictability of loading and effects makes it necessary to modify the traditional approach for planning and risk assessment of flood mitigation. The traditional approach attempts to manage the flooding system with the use of predictive/optimisation methods. These use the 'most likely' or average future projection to identify a singular optimal adaptation strategy. Because the planning and risk management in this method is often decoupled from the dynamics and uncertainty of the flooding system, this is a rather risky approach. This paper argues that responsible climate adaptation requires an alternative approach that attempts to assess and manage the resiliency of the flooding system for long-term future change. The aim of such an approach is to keep the system within a configuration of states that gives at least acceptable functioning despite the occurrence of possible changes. The paper proposes an options planning and asses...
Publication Details
Journal article
Persistent Identifiers
DOI
10.1680/ensu.2010.163.1.15
Read more
MAGID
2001454303
References