| Literature DB >> 29154012 |
Chiara Arrighi1, Lauro Rossi2, Eva Trasforini3, Roberto Rudari4, Luca Ferraris5, Marcello Brugioni6, Serena Franceschini7, Fabio Castelli8.
Abstract
Flood risk mitigation usually requires a significant investment of public resources and cost-effectiveness should be ensured. The assessment of the benefits of hydraulic works requires the quantification of (i) flood risk in absence of measures, (ii) risk in presence of mitigation works, (iii) investments to achieve acceptable residual risk. In this work a building-scale is adopted to estimate direct tangible flood losses to several building classes (e.g. residential, industrial, commercial, etc.) and respective contents, exploiting various sources of public open data in a GIS environment. The impact simulations for assigned flood hazard scenarios are computed through the RASOR platform which allows for an extensive characterization of the properties and their vulnerability through libraries of stage-damage curves. Recovery and replacement costs are estimated based on insurance data, market values and socio-economic proxies. The methodology is applied to the case study of Florence (Italy) where a system of retention basins upstream of the city is under construction to reduce flood risk. Current flood risk in the study area (70 km2) is about 170 Mio euros per year without accounting for people, infrastructures, cultural heritage and vehicles at risk. The monetary investment in the retention basins is paid off in about 5 years. However, the results show that although hydraulic works are cost-effective, a significant residual risk has to be managed and the achievement of the desired level of acceptable risk would require about 1 billion euros of investments.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-benefit analysis; Exposure; GIS; Recovery cost; Retention basin
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29154012 DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.11.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Manage ISSN: 0301-4797 Impact factor: 6.789