Geography and Sustainability (Jun 2024)

Climate change drives flooding risk increases in the Yellow River Basin

  • Hengxing Lan,
  • Zheng Zhao,
  • Langping Li,
  • Junhua Li,
  • Bojie Fu,
  • Naiman Tian,
  • Ruixun Lai,
  • Sha Zhou,
  • Yanbo Zhu,
  • Fanyu Zhang,
  • Jianbing Peng,
  • John J. Clague

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2
pp. 193 – 199

Abstract

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The Yellow River Basin (YRB) has experienced severe floods and continuous riverbed elevation throughout history. Global climate change has been suggested to be driving a worldwide increase in flooding risk. However, owing to insufficient evidence, the quantitative correlation between flooding and climate change remains ill-defined. We present a long time series of maximum flood discharge in the YRB dating back to 1843 compiled from historical documents and instrument measurements. Variations in yearly maximum flood discharge show distinct periods: a dramatic decreasing period from 1843 to 1950, and an oscillating gentle decreasing from 1950 to 2021, with the latter period also showing increasing more extreme floods. A Mann-Kendall test analysis suggests that the latter period can be further split into two distinct sub-periods: an oscillating gentle decreasing period from 1950 to 2000, and a clear recent increasing period from 2000 to 2021. We further predict that climate change will cause an ongoing remarkable increase in future flooding risk and an ∼44.4 billion US dollars loss of floods in the YRB in 2100.

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