Given the increasing impacts of flooding in Jakarta, methods for assessing current and future flood risk are required. In this paper, we use the Damagescanner-Jakarta risk model to project changes in future river flood risk under scenarios of climate change, land subsidence, and land use change. Damagescanner-Jakarta is a simple flood risk model that estimates flood risk in terms of annual expected damage, based on input maps of flood hazard, exposure, and vulnerability. We estimate baseline flood risk at USD 186 million p.a. Combining all future scenarios, we simulate a median increase in risk of +180 % by 2030. The single driver with the largest contribution to that increase is land subsidence (+126 %). We simulated the impacts of climate...
Hydrometeorological disasters are showing an increasing trend in Indonesia. Flash floods are part of...
The flooding of rivers and coastlines is the most frequent and damaging of all natural hazards. Betw...
AbstractAccording to the Assessment Report 4 of Working Group II of Inter-Governmental Panel on Clim...
Given the increasing impacts of flooding in Jakarta, methods for assessing current and future flood ...
An accurate understanding of flood risk and its drivers is crucial for effective risk management. De...
Jakarta has suffered major floods in 2002, 2007, and 2013. To cope with and adapt to both the curren...
Coastal flooding poses serious threats to coastal areas, and the vulnerability of coastal communitie...
The hydrological conditions upstream of the Ciliwung watershed are changing due to climate and land-...
Flood-prone areas can be vulnerable to a range of flooding mechanisms, with the associated hazards l...
Historical records show that flooding per se is not a new problem in Jakarta, and that flooding has ...
Understanding global future river flood risk is a prerequisite for the quantification of climate cha...
In Jakarta, climate change has been detected through rising air temperatures, increased intensity of...
As more and more people live near the sea, future flood risk must be properly assessed for sustainab...
On a conceptual and normative level, the debate around transformation in the context of disaster ris...
Climate change will have a significant impact on the water cycle and will lead to severe environment...
Hydrometeorological disasters are showing an increasing trend in Indonesia. Flash floods are part of...
The flooding of rivers and coastlines is the most frequent and damaging of all natural hazards. Betw...
AbstractAccording to the Assessment Report 4 of Working Group II of Inter-Governmental Panel on Clim...
Given the increasing impacts of flooding in Jakarta, methods for assessing current and future flood ...
An accurate understanding of flood risk and its drivers is crucial for effective risk management. De...
Jakarta has suffered major floods in 2002, 2007, and 2013. To cope with and adapt to both the curren...
Coastal flooding poses serious threats to coastal areas, and the vulnerability of coastal communitie...
The hydrological conditions upstream of the Ciliwung watershed are changing due to climate and land-...
Flood-prone areas can be vulnerable to a range of flooding mechanisms, with the associated hazards l...
Historical records show that flooding per se is not a new problem in Jakarta, and that flooding has ...
Understanding global future river flood risk is a prerequisite for the quantification of climate cha...
In Jakarta, climate change has been detected through rising air temperatures, increased intensity of...
As more and more people live near the sea, future flood risk must be properly assessed for sustainab...
On a conceptual and normative level, the debate around transformation in the context of disaster ris...
Climate change will have a significant impact on the water cycle and will lead to severe environment...
Hydrometeorological disasters are showing an increasing trend in Indonesia. Flash floods are part of...
The flooding of rivers and coastlines is the most frequent and damaging of all natural hazards. Betw...
AbstractAccording to the Assessment Report 4 of Working Group II of Inter-Governmental Panel on Clim...