Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Tramblay Yves, Amoussou E., Dorigo W., Mahé Gil. (2014). Flood risk under future climate in data sparse regions : linking extreme value models and flood generating processes. Journal of Hydrology, 519 (part A), p. 549-558. ISSN 0022-1694.

Titre du document
Flood risk under future climate in data sparse regions : linking extreme value models and flood generating processes
Année de publication
2014
Type de document
Article
Auteurs
Tramblay Yves, Amoussou E., Dorigo W., Mahé Gil
Source
Journal of Hydrology, 2014, 519 (part A), p. 549-558 ISSN 0022-1694
For many areas in the world, there is a need for future projections of flood risk in order to improve the possible mitigation actions. However, such an exercise is often made difficult in data-sparse regions, where the limited access to hydrometric data does not allow calibrating hydrological models in a robust way under non-stationary conditions. In this study we present an approach to estimate possible changes in flood risks, which incorporates flood generating processes into statistical models for extreme values. This approach is illustrated for a West African catchment, the Mono River (12,900 km2), with discharge, precipitation and temperature data available between 1988 and 2010 and where the dominant flood generating process is soil saturation. A soil moisture accounting (SMA) model, calibrated against a merged surface soil moisture microwave satellite dataset, is used to estimate the annual maximum soil saturation level that is related to the location parameter of a generalized extreme value model of annual maximum discharge. With such a model, it is possible to estimate the changes in flood quantiles from the changes in the annual maximum soil saturation level. An ensemble of regional climate models from the ENSEMBLES–AMMA project are then considered to estimate the potential future changes in soil saturation and subsequently the changes in flood risks for the period 2028–2050. A sensitivity analysis of the non-stationary flood quantiles has shown that with the projected changes on precipitation (−2%) and temperature (+1.22°) under the scenario A1B, the projected flood quantiles would stay in the range of the observed variability during 1988–2010. The proposed approach, relying on low data requirements, could be useful to estimate the projected changes in flood risks for other data-sparse catchments where the dominant flood-generating process is soil saturation.
Plan de classement
Dynamique de l'eau à l'interface sol-plante-atmosphère [062MECEAU02] ; Hydrologie [126TELAPP04]
Descripteurs
INONDATION ; ESTIMATION ; PREVISION ; CRUE ; VARIABILITE ; MODELISATION ; PRECIPITATION ; TEMPERATURE ; DONNEES SATELLITE ; RELATION SOL EAU ; HUMIDITE DU SOL ; SATURATION ; SIMULATION ; METHODOLOGIE ; COURS D'EAU ; BASSIN VERSANT ; CHANGEMENT CLIMATIQUE ; 1988 2010 ; 2028 2050 ; RISQUE CLIMATIQUE ; VALEURS EXTREMES ; DONNEES IMPARFAITES
Description Géographique
TOGO ; BENIN ; AFRIQUE DE L'OUEST
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010062854]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010062854
Contact