Inland Communities Bear Brunt of Hurricane-Related Flood Damage
When most people think of hurricanes, they think of mighty storm surges pounding coastal communities. But a team of researchers who studied 28 hurricanes from 2001 to 2014 found that freshwater flooding, sometimes thousands of miles inland, can cause even greater destruction.
"The number of insured residential losses from freshwater flooding is twice as high as that from storm surge," says
Villarini is part of a team of five researchers that looked at freshwater flood risk from North Atlantic tropical hurricanes as part of a groundbreaking study linking hurricanes to flood insurance claims. The study also is the first to analyze future flood impacts due to climate change and urbanization.
The study's findings, published in Scientific Reports, could influence the way policy makers think about risk management, emergency services, flood insurance, and urban development.
"This research sheds new light on the overall damage triggered by tropical cyclones along their entire path inland, not just on the coast," says
Until now, research into freshwater flood risk due to hurricanes has been limited. Villarini, Czajkowski, and their team set out to change that. They analyzed all significant flood events associated with
They found that though one-third of total residential flood insurance claims were related to storm surge, the impact of freshwater flooding from hurricanes was much more significant, affecting 21,705 communities, or an average of 775 communities per event, between 2001 and 2014.
In fact, 45 percent of freshwater claims were from states not traditionally associated with hurricane flood risk, including
When researchers looked more closely at the geographic distribution of flood claims, they found that 26 percent were located outside of
The fiscal impact of flood damage is significant. Researchers estimate that the average flood-claim payout for the 28 hurricanes was about
Looking ahead, researchers say that climate change and increased urbanization could result in even greater hurricane-related damage.
"Different modeling studies point to an increase in hurricane rainfall up to 20 percent in a warmer climate," says Villarini. "Moreover, if urbanization continues at its current pace, we expect to see a roughly 3 percent increase in the number if insurance claims associated with flooding from tropical hurricanes."
The timing of the research is important because national policies and ideas related to flood protection and resilience could be changing.
"The risk management industry is in need of additional risk assessment tools, and our study provides an added level of insight," says Villarini. "We now have a better understanding of the areas that are most vulnerable."
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