A National View of Storm Surge Risk and Inundation

Author:

Zachry Brian C.1,Booth William J.2,Rhome Jamie R.3,Sharon Tarah M.4

Affiliation:

1. Systems Research Group, Inc., and Storm Surge Unit, NOAA/NWS/NCEP/NHC, Miami, Florida

2. INNOVIM, and Storm Surge Unit, NOAA/NWS/NCEP/NHC, Miami, Florida

3. Storm Surge Unit, NOAA/NWS/NCEP/NHC, Miami, Florida

4. CyberData Technologies, and Storm Surge Unit, NOAA/NWS/NCEP/NHC, Miami, Florida

Abstract

Abstract The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), specifically the National Weather Service’s (NWS) National Hurricane Center (NHC), utilizes the hydrodynamic Sea, Lake, and Overland Surges from Hurricanes (SLOSH) model to simulate storm surge in 27 basins along the U.S East and Gulf Coasts. This information is provided to federal, state, and local partners to assist in a range of planning processes, risk assessment studies, and decision making. Based on climatology, tens of thousands of hypothetical hurricanes are simulated in each basin, and the potential storm surges are calculated. Storm surge composites—maximum envelopes of water (MEOWs) and maximum of maximums (MOMs)—are created to assess and visualize storm surge risk under varying conditions. While MEOWs and MOMs provide a local assessment of storm surge risk, they do not provide a national perspective owing to the 27 discrete grids. National assessments must therefore merge the grids together, which is a laborious task requiring considerable SLOSH and hydrodynamic modeling expertise. This paper describes the technique used to create national inundation maps for category 1–5 hurricanes using the SLOSH MOM product, and it provides a simple quantitative assessment of the potential societal impacts. Approximately 22 million people along the U.S East and Gulf Coasts are vulnerable to storm surge. For all hurricane categories, a substantial portion of the coastal population and housing units are at risk, and many evacuation routes become inundated. Florida is the most vulnerable state with 40% of its population at risk. These maps and analyses provide a new way to view, analyze, and communicate national storm surge risk and inundation.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Global and Planetary Change

Reference20 articles.

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2. ESRI, cited 2014: ArcGIS resources: Focal statistics. [Available online at http://resources.arcgis.com/en/help/main/10.2/index.html#//005m0000005w000000.]

3. FEMA, cited 2014: FEMA GIS data feeds. [Available online at http://gis.fema.gov/DataFeeds.html.]

4. Predicting the storm surge threat of Hurricane Sandy with the National Weather Service SLOSH model;Forbes;J. Mar. Sci. Eng.,2014

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