Challenges for Flood Risk Reduction in Poland’s Changing Climate
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Flood Risk and Its Management in Poland
2.1. Changes in Flood Risk in Poland
2.2. Flood Risk Management in Poland
- The “Emergency Flood Recovery Project” implemented in 1998–2006, with a budget of USD 524.45 million (The World Bank, Implementation Completion Report, Loan 4264-POL, 2006);
- The “Odra River Basin Flood Protection Project” implemented in 2007–2020, with a budget of USD 1.019 billion (The World Bank, Implementation Completion and Results Report, IBRD-74360, 2021);
- The “Odra-Vistula Flood Management Project” implemented in 2015–2023, with a budget of USD 1.317 billion (The World Bank, Project Appraisal Document, PAD1203, 2015).
- (i)
- flood levees with a total length of over 8600 km, mainly in first- and second-order rivers;
- (ii)
- flood water retention in storage reservoirs, which is one of the functions of multi-purpose reservoirs (about 100 reservoirs have a capacity greater than 1 million m3) (cf., https://www.gov.pl/web/premier/projekt-uchwaly-rady-ministrow-w-sprawie-przyjecia-programu-przeciwdzialania-niedoborowi-wody-na-lata-2022-2027-z-perspektywa-do-roku-2030 (accessed on 8 August 2023);
- (iii)
- dry reservoirs and river polders (of significantly lower storage value);
- (iv)
- development of streams and rivers, as well as stabilization of their channels (mainly in the south of Poland in the Upper Vistula and Upper Odra Basins).
- (i)
- protecting or increasing catchment retention in forested areas, in agricultural lands and in built-up and urbanized areas;
- (ii)
- development of local flood warning and response systems;
- (iii)
- extensive support for affected communities, mainly related to economic, technical, organizational and health support.
2.3. Challenge of Flash and Urban Floods
2.4. Synergy and Trade-Off between Flood and Drought Risk Reduction Measures
3. Results—Challenges in Flood Risk Management Policy
- (i)
- The plans contain too many specific measures, frequently small ones. Many of them come across as inapt and economically ineffective solutions. In this respect, it is important to follow an integrated approach to flood protection and protection of aquatic ecosystems, as well as to include measurability of the effects of FRMP implementation. The measurability may apply to the division of effects into limiting existing threats, preventing new threats and limiting negative effects of flooding.
- (ii)
- The methodology for preparing FRMPs [66] provides that the measures proposed for inclusion in the action plan should meet specific conditions. They should be adequate to the needs and objectives of flood risk reduction, being well thought out (determination of the location and parameters), well prepared (determination of the implementing agencies), as well as feasible for implementation (with guaranteed financing). They should also satisfactorily meet the economic efficiency criterion. Unfortunately, in many cases, the existing FRMPs do not meet one or more of these conditions. A significant part of the measures are not applicable to the problem areas characterized by the highest flood risk, while at the same time, less valuable areas are not sacrificed for the benefit of more valuable ones. Additionally, for many measures, the benefits that their implementation should bring are not defined. An important weakness of this methodology is also the lack of quantification of the impact of planned new water storage capacities on the flood risk downstream, taking into account flows from downstream tributaries.
- (iii)
- Finally, the FRMPs include many measures, which do not have much to do directly with flood risk reduction but are often linked to other objectives, such as improvement in inland navigation conditions, which has been vigorously promoted by the political group ruling the country since 2015.
- (i)
- When preparing FRMPs, it is important to control the impact of the implementation of measures on the achievement of the assumed goals, given the lack of continuity of databases, analyses and evaluations, and especially of economic efficiency.
- (ii)
- More nature-based solutions (NBSs) should be included, such as spreading of the flood embankments away from the river channel (e.g., on the River Odra) or use of oxbow lakes as part of polder retention, to effectively increase the storage capacity of the river valley. This applies primarily to the River Vistula, where the multi-channel system was not preserved in the process of regulation, and the high water bed was narrowed to a width corresponding to only 10–50% of the width of the natural valley [35].
- (i)
- It is necessary to develop strategies and local rainwater management plans not only in areas prone to flash and urban floods but in entire urban catchments in order to strengthen the preventive measures, as well as the economic tools and recommendations for their implementation. Good exemplary practices include the “Action plan to improve flood protection and drainage in the City of Krakow”, dated 2016, and the “Gdańsk Water Policy”, dated 2018. It is clear that this type of local approach must be adapted to local conditions. However, there are no general rules and requirements for these types of documents and their implementation.
- (ii)
- It is necessary to change the design principles of stormwater drainage systems based on a revised approach to heavy rainfall statistics, which are changing with climate change and the increasing levels of catchment sealing. These systems should also take into account the retention capacity of small urban watercourses and blue-green infrastructure. Such methods and tools have been developed in Poland as part of the PANDA project and are now widespread and accepted in a wide range of planning and design practices (https://retencja.pl/ (accessed on 8 August 2023). They should be recognized as official recommendations, reflected in standards.
- (iii)
- It is recommended to change the approach to land use planning and replace the principle of fast drainage (“from rain to drain”) through development of a “sponge city” [67,68] and decentralized rainwater runoff management based on the “source–pathway–receptor” approach [69,70], which incorporates the following measures:
- “at the source”—increase in the storage capacity, infiltration and use of rainwater where it falls across entire catchments in built-up areas, including private and public properties (it is necessary to urgently amend the Spatial Planning and Development Act and Building Law, as well as the provisions in local strategic and planning documents in Poland) and road infrastructure, allowing for temporary flooding of low-lying areas (short-term water storage should be incorporated into multi-functional land management, as well as land and infrastructure development), as well as the requirement for hydraulic neutrality (an unchanged surface runoff rate before and after an investment) of new private and public investments;
- “on the path”—departure from urban drainage systems in favor of retention systems; modeling and upgrading of underground networks and relieving these networks by connecting them to systems of open drainage ditches, canals, small watercourses and storage reservoirs, which would improve the flexibility of the system, the retention capacity and the possibility to control the flow of water based on stormwater runoff management plans;
- “in the receptor”—reduction in investments in areas at risk of local flooding in favor of increased storage space for water and the possibility to pre-treat stormwater runoff (e.g., via buffer parks) but also improvement in connectivity, biodiversity and recreation conditions. It is necessary to develop standards for land development and management in areas at risk of flooding, in combination with a flood insurance system. It is also recommended that the pollution load should not surpass the ability to maintain a good condition of the water bodies. In the coastal areas of rivers, which receive stormwater discharges, planning documents (within the range of the backwater impact of rivers) should take into account the conditions for the passage of river flood [50].
- (i)
- Introduction of the standard of protection and shaping greenery in investment processes;
- (ii)
- Legal empowerment of BGI;
- (iii)
- Managing water resources in the catchment system;
- (iv)
- Financial, legislative and organizational mechanisms benefiting an increase in natural retention;
- (v)
- Counteracting urban floods and droughts and the effects thereof with legislative changes;
- (vi)
- Introduction of the urban BGI management plan as the implementation of the recommendation to draw up a “greening plan” included in the EU Strategy for Biodiversity 2030.
4. Discussion
- (i)
- Preparation of a catalog of financial, legal and governance (competence, institutions) instruments necessary for an effective implementation of the planned flood risk reduction measures. The catalog of these instruments could take into account the areal integration of multi-type activities. In this way, effective and measurable areal effectiveness of the phased implementation of the planned flood risk reduction projects can be enhanced.
- (ii)
- In the years 2022–2025, for the purpose of updating the plans for 2028–2033, it is recommended to develop a flood risk assessment system in the field of pluvial floods, dominating in cities. Pluvial floods have not been included in the update of flood risk management plans for 2022–2027. This type of flooding may dominate in the future, as short-duration rainfall is more likely to exhibit greater increases [71]. Moreover, some heat waves, which are becoming more intense in cities, may culminate in heavy rainfall [72]. In the national dimension, it is urgent to identify the areas of potential threat and its sources, as well as the negative effects of flooding, and to develop a long-term forecasting system in order to reduce pluvial flood risk. Currently, and in the near future, cities are deprived of systemic support in this regard, especially under the conditions of simultaneous pluvial and fluvial flooding.
- (iii)
- In the update of the plans for 2028–2033, measures for reducing flood risk might be grouped within the boundaries of areas, enabling a realistic assessment of flood risk reduction as a result of the systemic implementation of projects reducing this risk. This applies in particular to areas prone to floods of various types. This could make it possible to move away from lists of separate (as well as difficult to grasp) and sometimes minor interventions in favor of a systemic spatially integrated grouping of them. This could also allow for effective prioritization of activities and staging of projects.
- (iv)
- A realistic approach for selecting structural measures might be possible, taking into account the real possibility of financing, which would concentrate the FRMPs for 2028–2033 on priority measures for flood protection in the Vistula and the Odra River Basins.
- (i)
- The integration of spatial planning with water management planning, including flood risk reduction, should be enhanced at all management levels, leading to long-awaited legislative amendments based on documented experience;
- (ii)
- The effectiveness of the implementation of the new National Urban Policy 2030, which recommends, among others, the creation of green and resilient cities, would require significant changes to the Spatial Planning and Development Act and the Construction Law to ensure legal empowerment for the protection and development of blue-green infrastructure;
- (iii)
- Plans for the development of multi-type water storage capacity in river basins should be prepared, taking into account the current conditions and development efforts and the impact of climate change, as well as land use and land cover changes, on flood hazard.
- (i)
- Strategic and regional studies conducted by the scientific and academic community, in cooperation with the administration and consultancy companies, seeking effective solutions in flood risk reduction;
- (ii)
- Continuous training of specialist personnel who deal with flood risk reduction, according to a well-thought-out system of life-long learning, including review of the curricula of higher education institutions.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
BGI | Blue-Green Infrastructure |
BGS | Blue-Green Solutions |
EU | European Union |
FD | EU Floods Directive (Directive 2007/60/EC) |
FRMPs | Flood Risk Management Plans |
KZGW | National Water Management Authority in the structure of theNational Water Holding-Polish Waters (PGW-WP) |
NBSs | Nature-Based Solutions |
NGOs | Non-Government Organizations |
RBMPs | River Basin Management Plans (RBMPs) |
PGW-WP | National Water Holding-Polish Waters |
uFRMPs | Update of the Flood Risk Management Plans in the third planning cycle (2022–2027) |
uRBMPs | Updated River Basin Management Plans (RBMPs) |
WFD | EU Water Framework Directive (Directive 2000/60/EC) |
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Town | Number of Interventions by Fire Brigades | Category of Threat | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Low | Local | Moderate | Large | Disastrous | ||
Elbląg | 178 (100) | 10 (6) | 165 (93) | 1 (0) | 2 (1) | 0 (0) |
Kalisz | 541 (100) | 17 (3) | 519 (96) | 4 (1) | 1 (0) | 0 (0) |
Konin | 225 (100) | 6 (3) | 218 (97) | 1 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Koszalin | 63 (100) | 8 (13) | 55 (87) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Kraków | 2211 (100) | 1435 (65) | 763 (35) | 8 (0) | 2 (0) | 3 (0) |
Olsztyn | 229 (100) | 19 (8) | 209 (91) | 1 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Poznań | 863 (100) | 75 (9) | 787 (91) | 1 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Rzeszów | 854 (100) | 27 (3) | 824 (96) | 3 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Warszawa | 3183 (100) | 1043 (33) | 2129 (67) | 10 (0) | 1 (0) | 0 (0) |
Zielona Góra | 417 (100) | 143 (34) | 272 (65) | 2 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
# | Activity (Institutional Level of Implementation) | Main Metrics | Explanation |
---|---|---|---|
i | Develop and implement integrated, long-term flood and drought risk management policy in Poland (at all planning levels) | Reduction in the frequency of floods and droughts in relation to the frequency and spatial risk of precipitation excess and deficiency. | Synergy should be the basis for measures taken to mitigate the combined flood and drought risk, with cost optimization. Separate treatment of flood risk and drought risk in planning may lead to solutions, which “do not know about each other” and can be in conflict with each other (cf., Section 2.4). A solution aimed at flood reduction may create disbenefits for drought risk reduction and vice versa. By seeking a compromise, we may not solve any of these problems. |
ii | Include the “National Surface Water Renatu-ration Programme” in the River Basin Management Plans (at the national level in the planning system and the regional or local level in the implementation) | Assessment of the ecosystem functionality of rivers in sections of length, ensuring a real balance of its biological and economic functions. | River Basin Management Plans are basic documents implementing the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD) [3], which are under preparation in Poland. Their implementation should take into account the requirements of the ecosystem functionality of the rivers they concern. |
iii | Prioritize drought and flood risk reduction measures (at all planning levels) | Cost–benefit ratio (taking into account environmental, social and economic benefits), measured on a spatial scale adequate for the extent of expected impacts and a time scale appropriate for balancing the costs and benefits. | Introduce an efficient system for prioritization of drought and flood risk reduction measures, a mechanism for their selection and the conditions for accepting them for implementation in order to enhance the efficiency and cost effectiveness of solutions. Only measures with an acceptable cost/benefit ratio should be included in planning analyses. |
iv | Upgrade urban planning documents (at regional and local levels) | Environmental performance measures included in the updated plans. | Include provisions in urban planning documents, which, apart from maintaining a minimum proportion of biologically active areas, will also ensure better conditions for the functioning of natural systems and support rainwater management in cities, including the following: preservation of the continuity of the natural system, restoration of species diversity and access to water by connecting green spaces with rainwater retention systems. |
v | Jointly treat the blue-green infrastructure in cities and their surroundings (at local level) | Measures of the impact of land use on water management and ecological efficiency. | Necessary cooperation of local governments and various entities responsible for water management and planning in order to ensure connectivity of the blue and green infrastructure in cities and their surroundings and in the region, including limiting unfavorable interactions between urban and non-urban areas, e.g., for flood risk, the risk of water deficit and over-exploitation of groundwater. |
vi | Plans for storage capacity of many types should be prepared for problem areas (at regional and local levels) | Measures of real assessment of the effectiveness of the planned retention at the scale of the area in relation to the expected retention functionality and the level of its effectiveness at the stages of its spatial and temporal implementation. | Improve the planning and implementation of water retention measures geared toward flood and drought risk reduction. Plans for the development of multi-type storage capacity should be prepared for problem areas, including the determination of monitoring cross-sections to balance the effects and assess the phased implementation of these plans. Such plans must be based on study documents, which take into account hydrological, hydrogeological and environmental conditions. They should define the development effort and determine the impact of climate change. |
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Kundzewicz, Z.W.; Januchta-Szostak, A.; Nachlik, E.; Pińskwar, I.; Zaleski, J. Challenges for Flood Risk Reduction in Poland’s Changing Climate. Water 2023, 15, 2912. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15162912
Kundzewicz ZW, Januchta-Szostak A, Nachlik E, Pińskwar I, Zaleski J. Challenges for Flood Risk Reduction in Poland’s Changing Climate. Water. 2023; 15(16):2912. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15162912
Chicago/Turabian StyleKundzewicz, Zbigniew W., Anna Januchta-Szostak, Elżbieta Nachlik, Iwona Pińskwar, and Janusz Zaleski. 2023. "Challenges for Flood Risk Reduction in Poland’s Changing Climate" Water 15, no. 16: 2912. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15162912
APA StyleKundzewicz, Z. W., Januchta-Szostak, A., Nachlik, E., Pińskwar, I., & Zaleski, J. (2023). Challenges for Flood Risk Reduction in Poland’s Changing Climate. Water, 15(16), 2912. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15162912