4.6 Article

Analysis and quantification of potential consequences in multirisk coastal context at different spatial scales (Normandy, France)

Journal

NATURAL HAZARDS
Volume 99, Issue 2, Pages 637-664

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-019-03763-5

Keywords

Consequences; Element at risk; Spatial scale; Weighting; Multi-criteria

Funding

  1. COMUE Normandy University
  2. ANR scientific project RICOCHET: multi-RIsk assessment on Coastal territory in a global CHange context - French Research National Agency [ANR-16-CE03-0008]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Coastal environment with high interaction between nature and societies is subject to multi-hazard interaction such as landslides, flood or cliff retreat. These territories are characterized by numerous elements at risk located in valley bottoms, front sea or at the outlets of small dry watershed. The aim is to quantify the potential consequences of EaR by integrating multiple hazards exposure at various scale analyses. To quantify the element at risk, three steps have been required. First, an initial rank has been attributed to each class of element at risk at three different scales analysis. Second, the potential consequences are weighted according to environmental dimension. Third, the consequences are combined with a linear combination of criteria in GIS environment. At medium-scale analysis, element at risk highlighted is built-up areas, national road, railway, lifeline and urban centers. At large-scale analysis, consequences concern any kind of house, apartment and complex located on multiple exposure areas. At local scale, consequences concern buildings located on multiple exposure areas with one floor in mixed materials and built after 1980. Thus, this method proposes an approach with multiple scales analysis and by integrating multiple exposure areas to quantify potential consequences. With the environmental dimension in element at risk analysis, it is an intermediate step to traditional risk analysis and, more specifically multirisk analysis without considering in this case the spatial and temporal dimension of hazards.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available