A Common Methodology for Risk Assessment and Mapping of Climate Change Related Hazards—Implications for Climate Change Adaptation Policies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Disaster Risk Reduction, Climate Change Adaptation, and the Role of Risk Assessment
2.1. Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction
- (1)
- Considering gradual changes in average temperature, sea level and precipitation, and adapt development accordingly, and
- (2)
- Management and reduction of the risks that are related to extreme weather events.
2.2. Risk Assessment and Its Role in Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaptation
Risk Assessment Efforts in the Study Area
3. Development of a Common Risk Assessment Methodology (CRAM)
3.1. Case Study
Country | Hazard Type | Element at Risk | Scale |
---|---|---|---|
Bulgaria | Wildfire | Forest | Local |
Bosnia Herzegovina | Flood | Buildings | Local |
Hungary | Extreme wind | Buildings/Population | Local |
Romania | Heat wave | Population | Local |
Serbia | Drought and drought related wildfire | Crops | Local |
Slovakia | Flood | Population | Local |
- Literature review
- Questionnaire
- Analysis of questionnaire results
- Design of a general methodology
- Methodology development for specific hazard types
- Extension of the methodology to consider global change
3.2. Design of the CRAM
- Needs and expectations of the individual partners
- Relevant hazards for each case study area and priorities.
- Legal requirements at the national level.
- Existing products (e.g., risk maps, risk matrices, hazard and vulnerability maps, risk scenarios, etc.)
- Existing data, as well as their availability, quality, format, and scale.
4. Blueprint for the CRAM
- The lack of a common language (terminology)
- The lack of appropriate data (of the required quantity, quality, scale, format, and accessibility)
4.1. Risk Identification
4.2. Risk Analysis
4.2.1. Qualitative Risk Analysis—the Risk Matrix
4.2.2. Quantitative Risk Analysis
4.3. Risk Evaluation
4.4. Case Study Application for Specific Hazards
5. Discussion
5.1. Extension of CRAM to Include Scenario Analysis
5.2. Benefits and Contribution
5.3. Limitations and Future Perspectives
- limitations related to the development of the methodology, and
- limitations related to the implementation of the methodology in the pilot areas.
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Papathoma-Köhle, M.; Promper, C.; Glade, T. A Common Methodology for Risk Assessment and Mapping of Climate Change Related Hazards—Implications for Climate Change Adaptation Policies. Climate 2016, 4, 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli4010008
Papathoma-Köhle M, Promper C, Glade T. A Common Methodology for Risk Assessment and Mapping of Climate Change Related Hazards—Implications for Climate Change Adaptation Policies. Climate. 2016; 4(1):8. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli4010008
Chicago/Turabian StylePapathoma-Köhle, Maria, Catrin Promper, and Thomas Glade. 2016. "A Common Methodology for Risk Assessment and Mapping of Climate Change Related Hazards—Implications for Climate Change Adaptation Policies" Climate 4, no. 1: 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli4010008
APA StylePapathoma-Köhle, M., Promper, C., & Glade, T. (2016). A Common Methodology for Risk Assessment and Mapping of Climate Change Related Hazards—Implications for Climate Change Adaptation Policies. Climate, 4(1), 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli4010008