Assessment of climate change impacts on river flooding due to Typhoon Hagibis in 2019 using nonglobal warming experiments

Author:

Nihei Yasuo1ORCID,Oota Koyo2,Kawase Hiroaki3,Sayama Takahiro4ORCID,Nakakita Eiichi4,Ito Takehiko2,Kashiwada Jin2

Affiliation:

1. Tokyo University of Science, Dept. of Civil Engineering Chiba Japan

2. Tokyo University of Science Chiba Japan

3. Meteorological Research Institute Japan Meteorological Agency Ibaraki Japan

4. Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

Abstract

AbstractIn this study, a series of numerical analyses of meteorology, runoff, river flow, and inundation were performed to quantitatively evaluate the effects of historical warming on precipitation, discharge, water level, and flood inundation. This study was on the flood inundation of the Chikuma River Basin in Japan caused by Typhoon Hagibis in 2019. The historical warming impact on Typhoon Hagibis was analyzed by comparing nonglobal warming experiments (NonWs) and control experiments (CTLs) to reproduce the current situation. Calculated results showed that the ratios of the index of CTLs to that of NonWs (mean CTL to mean NonW) as indicators of the impact of historical warming were 1.08, 1.22, and 1.08–3.08 for total precipitation, peak river discharge, and peak water level (from pre‐flood level and high‐water level), respectively, and 48.1 and 595 for overflow depth and inundation volume for the Chikuma River, respectively. Results of the hydrologic‐sensitivity analysis indicated that the influence of historical warming during the last 40‐year period was already evident on overflow and flooding, whose sensitivities were higher than those of discharge and water level.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Geography, Planning and Development,Environmental Engineering

Reference57 articles.

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2. Attribution of Extreme Rainfall in Southeast China During May 2015

3. Cabinet Office Government of Japan. (2018).On disaster damage by the Heavy Precipitation in July 2018 (in Japanese).http://www.bousai.go.jp/updates/h30typhoon7/pdf/310109_1700_h30typhoon7_01.pdf

4. Cabinet Office Government of Japan. (2019).On disaster damage by the Typhoon No. 19 (Hagibis) in 2019 (in Japanese).http://www.bousai.go.jp/updates/r1typhoon19/pdf/r1typhoon19_45.pdf.

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