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- Title
A National‐Scale Coastal Flood Hazard Assessment for the Atoll Nation of Tuvalu.
- Authors
Wandres, Moritz; Espejo, Antonio; Sovea, Tomasi; Tetoa, Sapolu; Malologa, Faatasi; Webb, Arthur; Lewis, James; Lee, Gary; Damlamian, Hervé
- Abstract
Atoll nations such as Tuvalu are considered to be amongst those most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. Here we present a national‐scale coastal flood hazard assessment for Tuvalu based on high‐resolution Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) topography and bathymetry. We follow a fully probabilistic approach, considering sea level anomalies, tides, and extreme wave conditions from a mixed climate (i.e., from distant extra‐tropical storms and local tropical cyclones). Nearshore processes such as wave setup and runup are also accounted for. Hazard maps were calculated for the present sea level, as well as for sea level rise projections corresponding to different shared socioeconomic pathways (SSP2 4.5 and SSP5 8.5) and time horizons (2060 and 2100). With a mean elevation of 1.55 m above mean sea level (1.37 m above mean high water spring) >25% of land area is inundated once every 5 years and >50% of land area floods once every 100 years nationally. Results indicate that present day 1‐in‐50 years floods (>45% of land area flooded) will occur more than once every 5 years by 2060 (annual exceedance probability >20%), even under the moderate SSP2 4.5 sea level rise projections. Results of this study highlight the pressing need for ambitious and large‐scale adaptation solutions which are commensurate with projected sea level rise and marine hazard impacts. The methodologies presented in this paper can easily be applied to other low‐lying islands in the tropical Pacific, where mixed climates (i.e., regular and TC conditions) and non‐linear nearshore processes dominate extreme water levels and flooding. Plain Language Summary: Low‐lying atoll nations such as Tuvalu are widely recognized to be amongst those most impacted by the effects of climate change. To make informed adaptation decisions, accurate baseline data (i.e., topography and bathymetry) and marine hazard information are fundamental. In this paper we present a national‐scale coastal flood hazard assessment for Tuvalu based on state‐of‐the art high‐resolution baseline data and statistical and numerical models. We considered the present‐day sea levels and sea level rise projections corresponding to different climate change scenarios. Under present‐day sea levels >25% of Tuvalu's land area floods once every 5 years and >50% of land area floods once every 100 years. Our results indicate a significant increase in severity and frequency of extreme coastal flooding due to climate change with present‐day 1‐in‐50‐year floods occurring more than once every 5 years by 2060. This study highlights the pressing need for ambitious and large‐scale adaptation solutions. The methodology presented here is suitable to be used in other Pacific Island locations. Key Points: We present a probabilistic flood hazard assessment of Tuvalu considering tides, sea level anomalies, storm surges, and waves from a mixed climate (i.e., generated by tropical and extratropical storms)A mean elevation of 1.55 m above MSL makes Tuvalu highly vulnerable to wave driven flooding with >25% of land area inundated once every 5 yearsPresent day 1‐in‐50 years floods (>45% of land area flooded) will occur more than once every 5 years by 2060 due to sea level rise
- Subjects
TUVALU; STORM surges; FLOOD warning systems; RISK assessment; OPTICAL radar; LIDAR; SEA level; CORAL reefs &; islands
- Publication
Earth's Future, 2024, Vol 12, Issue 4, p1
- ISSN
2328-4277
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1029/2023EF003924