Modelling the spatial extent and severity of extreme European windstorms

Windstorms are a primary natural hazard affecting Europe that are commonly linked to substantial property and infrastructural damage and are responsible for the largest spatially aggregated financial losses. Such extreme winds are typically generated by extratropical cyclone systems originating in t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series C (Applied Statistics)
Main Authors: Sharkey, Paul, Tawn, Jonathan, Brown, Simon
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/138304/
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/138304/1/Modelling_the_spatial_extent_and_severity_of_extreme_European_windstorms_Oct19.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1111/rssc.12391
Description
Summary:Windstorms are a primary natural hazard affecting Europe that are commonly linked to substantial property and infrastructural damage and are responsible for the largest spatially aggregated financial losses. Such extreme winds are typically generated by extratropical cyclone systems originating in the North Atlantic and passing over Europe. Previous statistical studies tend to model extreme winds at a given set of sites, corresponding to inference in an Eulerian framework. Such inference cannot incorporate knowledge of the life cycle and progression of extratropical cyclones across the region and is forced to make restrictive assumptions about the extremal dependence structure. We take an entirely different approach which overcomes these limitations by working in a Lagrangian framework. Specifically, we model the development of windstorms over time, preserving the physical characteristics linking the windstorm and the cyclone track, the path of local vorticity maxima, and make a key finding that the spatial extent of extratropical windstorms becomes more localized as its magnitude increases irrespective of the location of the storm track. Our model allows simulation of synthetic windstorm events to derive the joint distributional features over any set of sites giving physically consistent extrapolations to rarer events. From such simulations improved estimates of this hazard can be achieved in terms of both intensity and area affected.