Estimating the current risk of coastal flooding requires adequate information on extreme sea levels. For over a decade, the only global data available was the DINAS-COAST Extreme Sea Levels (DCESL) dataset, which applies a static approximation to estimate extreme sea levels. Recently, a dynamically derived dataset was developed: the Global Tide and Surge Reanalysis (GTSR) dataset. Here, we compare the two datasets. The differences between DCESL and GTSR are generally larger than the confidence intervals of GTSR. Compared to observed extremes, DCESL generally overestimates extremes with a mean bias of 0.6 m. With a mean bias of −0.2 m GTSR generally underestimates extremes, particularly in the tropics. The Dynamic Interactive Vulnerability A...
One of the main consequences of mean sea level rise (SLR) on human settlements is an increase in flo...
Current coastal flood risk assessments fail to capture flood spatial dependence at large scales. In ...
Any increase in flood frequency or severity due to sea level rise or changes in storminess would adv...
Estimating the current risk of coastal flooding requires adequate information on extreme sea levels....
The largest collection of tide gauge records assembled to date, called GESLA-2, has been used to pro...
The largest collection of tide gauge records assembled to date, called GESLA-2, has been used to pro...
The largest collection of tide gauge records assembled to date, called GESLA-2, has been used to pro...
Extreme sea levels, caused by storm surges and high tides, can have devastating societal impacts. To...
Concerns about climate change highlights the needs to understand extreme sea levels and the resultin...
The world’s coastal areas are increasingly at risk of coastal flooding due to sea-level rise (SLR). ...
The world’s coastal areas are increasingly at risk of coastal flooding due to sea-level rise (SLR). ...
This study provides a literature-based comparative assessment of uncertainties and biases in global ...
Global models of tide, storm surge, and wave setup are used to obtain projections of episodic coasta...
One of the main consequences of mean sea level rise (SLR) on human settlements is an increase in flo...
Current coastal flood risk assessments fail to capture flood spatial dependence at large scales. In ...
Any increase in flood frequency or severity due to sea level rise or changes in storminess would adv...
Estimating the current risk of coastal flooding requires adequate information on extreme sea levels....
The largest collection of tide gauge records assembled to date, called GESLA-2, has been used to pro...
The largest collection of tide gauge records assembled to date, called GESLA-2, has been used to pro...
The largest collection of tide gauge records assembled to date, called GESLA-2, has been used to pro...
Extreme sea levels, caused by storm surges and high tides, can have devastating societal impacts. To...
Concerns about climate change highlights the needs to understand extreme sea levels and the resultin...
The world’s coastal areas are increasingly at risk of coastal flooding due to sea-level rise (SLR). ...
The world’s coastal areas are increasingly at risk of coastal flooding due to sea-level rise (SLR). ...
This study provides a literature-based comparative assessment of uncertainties and biases in global ...
Global models of tide, storm surge, and wave setup are used to obtain projections of episodic coasta...
One of the main consequences of mean sea level rise (SLR) on human settlements is an increase in flo...
Current coastal flood risk assessments fail to capture flood spatial dependence at large scales. In ...
Any increase in flood frequency or severity due to sea level rise or changes in storminess would adv...