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Title: Data from "The Influence of Climate Change on Flooding and Social Inequalities from Remnants of Hurricane Ida"

Abstract

Previous research has demonstrated that tropical cyclone-related precipitation and flooding have been increased by anthropogenic global warming. Our work aims to quantify the contribution of climate change to the deadly flooding from the remnants of Hurricane Ida (2021) and its impact on human society. We developed an analysis framework that combines lessons from climate change attribution science, two-dimensional hydrodynamic modeling, and flood impact evaluation, including a social inequality index, to estimate remnants of Ida flooding and consequences responding to current (locally 1°C warmer) and future (another 1°C warmer) climate change. We find that an additional quarter to a half million people were exposed to flooding due to current and future climate change. The human influence on flood impacts was larger with deeper flood water depth (≥ 1 m) than with shallow depths. Socially vulnerable populations were found to be disproportionately more affected, and climate change exacerbates this inequality

Authors:
; ORCiD logo ; ; ORCiD logo
  1. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  2. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  3. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Publication Date:
Research Org.:
MultiSector Dynamics - Living, Intuitive, Value-adding, Environment
Sponsoring Org.:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Biological and Environmental Research (BER)
Subject:
Climate Change; Environmental Justice; Flood; Hurricane Ida
OSTI Identifier:
2000435
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.57931/2000435

Citation Formats

Li, Xue, Wehner, Michael, Judi, David, and Hetland, Robert. Data from "The Influence of Climate Change on Flooding and Social Inequalities from Remnants of Hurricane Ida". United States: N. p., 2023. Web. doi:10.57931/2000435.
Li, Xue, Wehner, Michael, Judi, David, & Hetland, Robert. Data from "The Influence of Climate Change on Flooding and Social Inequalities from Remnants of Hurricane Ida". United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.57931/2000435
Li, Xue, Wehner, Michael, Judi, David, and Hetland, Robert. 2023. "Data from "The Influence of Climate Change on Flooding and Social Inequalities from Remnants of Hurricane Ida"". United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.57931/2000435. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/2000435. Pub date:Sat Sep 16 04:00:00 UTC 2023
@article{osti_2000435,
title = {Data from "The Influence of Climate Change on Flooding and Social Inequalities from Remnants of Hurricane Ida"},
author = {Li, Xue and Wehner, Michael and Judi, David and Hetland, Robert},
abstractNote = {Previous research has demonstrated that tropical cyclone-related precipitation and flooding have been increased by anthropogenic global warming. Our work aims to quantify the contribution of climate change to the deadly flooding from the remnants of Hurricane Ida (2021) and its impact on human society. We developed an analysis framework that combines lessons from climate change attribution science, two-dimensional hydrodynamic modeling, and flood impact evaluation, including a social inequality index, to estimate remnants of Ida flooding and consequences responding to current (locally 1°C warmer) and future (another 1°C warmer) climate change. We find that an additional quarter to a half million people were exposed to flooding due to current and future climate change. The human influence on flood impacts was larger with deeper flood water depth (≥ 1 m) than with shallow depths. Socially vulnerable populations were found to be disproportionately more affected, and climate change exacerbates this inequality},
doi = {10.57931/2000435},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Sat Sep 16 04:00:00 UTC 2023},
month = {Sat Sep 16 04:00:00 UTC 2023}
}