Low-frequency high-impact storms can cause flood and erosion over large coastal areas, which in turn can lead to a significant risk to coastal occupation, producing devastation and immobilising cities and even countries. It is therefore paramount to evaluate risk along the coast at a regional scale through the identification of storm impact hotspots. The Coastal Risk Assessment Framework Phase 1 (CRAF1) is a screening process based on a coastal-index approach that assesses the potential exposure of every kilometre along the coast to previously identified hazards. CRAF1 integrates both hazard (e.g. overwash, erosion) and exposure indicators to create a final Coastal Index (CI). The application of CRAF1 at two contrasting case studies (Ria Fo...
A Coastal Risk Assessment Framework (CRAF) provides two levels of coastal risk and vulnerability ass...
The identification and classification of critical coastal areas is becoming more and more important ...
Half of the world's population lives within 60 km of the sea and this figure is likely to rise up to...
Low-frequency high-impact storms can cause flood and erosion over large coastal areas, which in turn...
Low-frequency high-impact storms can cause flood and erosion over large coastal areas, which in turn...
Managing coastal risk at the regional scale requires a prioritization of resources along the shoreli...
High-energy storm events induce hazards that promote damage and destruction of property and infrastr...
The Resilience-Increasing Strategies for Coasts – Toolkit (RISC-KIT) FP7 EU project (2013-2017) aims...
Coastal zones are under increasing risk as coastal hazards increase due to climate change and the co...
A Coastal Risk Assessment Framework (CRAF) provides two levels of coastal risk and vulnerability ass...
The Resilience-Increasing Strategies for Coasts – Toolkit (RISC-KIT) FP7 EU project (2013-2017) aims...
European coasts suffer notably from hazards caused by low-probability and high-impact hydrometeorolo...
Coastal areas are among the most dynamic earth systems as they are exposed to powerful agents. Near-...
The Italian coasts are threatened by coastal flooding and erosion. The Emilia-Romagna region coastli...
CRAF Phase 1: Outcomes of for the North Norfolk case study. Applied by University of Cambridge in c...
A Coastal Risk Assessment Framework (CRAF) provides two levels of coastal risk and vulnerability ass...
The identification and classification of critical coastal areas is becoming more and more important ...
Half of the world's population lives within 60 km of the sea and this figure is likely to rise up to...
Low-frequency high-impact storms can cause flood and erosion over large coastal areas, which in turn...
Low-frequency high-impact storms can cause flood and erosion over large coastal areas, which in turn...
Managing coastal risk at the regional scale requires a prioritization of resources along the shoreli...
High-energy storm events induce hazards that promote damage and destruction of property and infrastr...
The Resilience-Increasing Strategies for Coasts – Toolkit (RISC-KIT) FP7 EU project (2013-2017) aims...
Coastal zones are under increasing risk as coastal hazards increase due to climate change and the co...
A Coastal Risk Assessment Framework (CRAF) provides two levels of coastal risk and vulnerability ass...
The Resilience-Increasing Strategies for Coasts – Toolkit (RISC-KIT) FP7 EU project (2013-2017) aims...
European coasts suffer notably from hazards caused by low-probability and high-impact hydrometeorolo...
Coastal areas are among the most dynamic earth systems as they are exposed to powerful agents. Near-...
The Italian coasts are threatened by coastal flooding and erosion. The Emilia-Romagna region coastli...
CRAF Phase 1: Outcomes of for the North Norfolk case study. Applied by University of Cambridge in c...
A Coastal Risk Assessment Framework (CRAF) provides two levels of coastal risk and vulnerability ass...
The identification and classification of critical coastal areas is becoming more and more important ...
Half of the world's population lives within 60 km of the sea and this figure is likely to rise up to...