Print Email Facebook Twitter Advancing Flood Risk Screening Title Advancing Flood Risk Screening Author van Berchum, E.C. (TU Delft Hydraulic Structures and Flood Risk) Contributor Jonkman, Sebastiaan N. (promotor) Kok, M. (promotor) Timmermans, Jos (copromotor) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Date 2022-06-14 Abstract Manycoastal cities are struggling with a rapidly growing risk of flooding. The sizeand complexity of these cities often demand a coordinated strategy, consistingof a combination of flood risk reduction measures. A crucial part in the designprocess is the identification of effective flood risk management strategies. However,data and resources are often limited in these early stages of design, which ischaracterized by the many different options and measures that can be considered.The focus of this study is to identify the needs and challenges of this ‘floodrisk screening’ phase and develop and implement a model framework to supportdecision making in this stage. At the centre of the study is the developmentand application of such a model: the Flood Risk Reduction Evaluation andScreening, or FLORES, model. This dissertation includes two real-life casestudies which explain the structure and development of the FLORES model, aswell as two new applications in conceptual design – flood risk analysis basedon low-resolution data, and robust decision making – that are easier toimplement in flood risk management when combined with flood risk screeningmodels.The FLORESmodel has been implemented in two case studies, one in the USA and one in Mozambique.In the Houston-Galveston Bay Area, USA, the model showed the reliance of theentire region’s flood risk on the choices made at the coastal barriers.Especially the effectiveness of inland Nature-based Solutions heavily relied onthe placement and elevation of coastal structures. In Beira, Mozambique, coastalstructures are combined and compared with other measures, such as drainagesystems, retention, and early-warning systems. The use of flood risk screeningprovided insight into the effectiveness of individual measures, as well ascombinations of measures, and prioritized strategies based on predeterminedgoals. In both cities, these insights, combined with a better understanding ofthe local flood risk and how it is influenced by risk reducing measures andfuture scenarios, can be used to support decision makers in finding the mosteffective strategy going forward. Subject Flood riskflood simulationAdaptive designRobust decision makingFlood risk management To reference this document use: https://doi.org/10.4233/uuid:fe290b5f-40ba-4678-8e8c-e4a9a2cf292f ISBN 978-94-6421-779-7 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type doctoral thesis Rights © 2022 E.C. van Berchum Files PDF EC_van_Berchum_2022_Advan ... eening.pdf 18.57 MB PDF Propositions_Erik_van_Berchum.pdf 174.83 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:fe290b5f-40ba-4678-8e8c-e4a9a2cf292f/datastream/OBJ1/view