Water (Jun 2020)

Large Scale Flood Risk Mapping in Data Scarce Environments: An Application for Romania

  • Raffaele Albano,
  • Caterina Samela,
  • Iulia Crăciun,
  • Salvatore Manfreda,
  • Jan Adamowski,
  • Aurelia Sole,
  • Åke Sivertun,
  • Alexandru Ozunu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w12061834
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 1834

Abstract

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Large-scale flood risk assessment is essential in supporting national and global policies, emergency operations and land-use management. The present study proposes a cost-efficient method for the large-scale mapping of direct economic flood damage in data-scarce environments. The proposed framework consists of three main stages: (i) deriving a water depth map through a geomorphic method based on a supervised linear binary classification; (ii) generating an exposure land-use map developed from multi-spectral Landsat 8 satellite images using a machine-learning classification algorithm; and (iii) performing a flood damage assessment using a GIS tool, based on the vulnerability (depth–damage) curves method. The proposed integrated method was applied over the entire country of Romania (including minor order basins) for a 100-year return time at 30-m resolution. The results showed how the description of flood risk may especially benefit from the ability of the proposed cost-efficient model to carry out large-scale analyses in data-scarce environments. This approach may help in performing and updating risk assessments and management, taking into account the temporal and spatial changes in hazard, exposure, and vulnerability.

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