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Increased population exposure to Amphan‐scale cyclones under future climates

Authors :
Dann Mitchell
Laurence Hawker
James Savage
Rory Bingham
Natalie S. Lord
Md Jamal Uddin Khan
Paul Bates
Fabien Durand
Ahmadul Hassan
Saleemul Huq
Akm Saiful Islam
Yann Krien
Jeffrey Neal
Chris Sampson
Andy Smith
Laurent Testut
Source :
Climate Resilience and Sustainability, Vol 1, Iss 2, Pp n/a-n/a (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Southern Asia experiences some of the most damaging climate events in the world, with loss of life from some cyclones in the hundreds of thousands. Despite this, research on climate extremes in the region is substantially lacking compared to other parts of the world. To understand the narrative of how an extreme event in the region may change in the future, we consider Super Cyclone Amphan, which made landfall in May 2020, bringing storm surges of 2–4 m to coastlines of India and Bangladesh. Using the latest CMIP6 climate model projections, coupled with storm surge, hydrological, and socio‐economic models, we consider how the population exposure to a storm surge of Amphan's scale changes in the future. We vary future sea level rise and population changes consistent with projections out to 2100, but keep other factors constant. Both India and Bangladesh will be negatively impacted, with India showing >200% increased exposure to extreme storm surge flooding (>3 m) under a high emissions scenario and Bangladesh showing an increase in exposure of >80% for low‐level flooding (>0.1 m). It is only when we follow a low‐emission scenario, consistent with the 2°C Paris Agreement Goal, that we see no real change in Bangladesh's storm surge exposure, mainly due to the population and climate signals cancelling each other out. For India, even with this low‐emission scenario, increases in flood exposure are still substantial (>50%). While here we attribute only the storm surge flooding component of the event to climate change, we highlight that tropical cyclones are multifaceted, and damages are often an integration of physical and social components. We recommend that future climate risk assessments explicitly account for potential compounding factors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26924587
Volume :
1
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Climate Resilience and Sustainability
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.43636dc98d4545188f545efa430088b6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cli2.36