Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings

Earth system models have become viable alternatives to traditional hydrological models in supporting global hydrological forecasting of river flow during the last decades. Hydrological forecasting systems rely on a climatology of flood hazard to derive flood thresholds, which are used to generate ea...

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Main Author: Zsoter, Ervin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/1/Zsoter_thesis.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/2/Zsoter_form.pdf
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spelling ftunivreading:oai:centaur.reading.ac.uk:112572 2023-09-05T13:22:34+02:00 Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings Zsoter, Ervin 2023-02-28 text https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/ https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/1/Zsoter_thesis.pdf https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/2/Zsoter_form.pdf en eng https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/1/Zsoter_thesis.pdf https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/2/Zsoter_form.pdf Zsoter, Ervin (2023) Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings. PhD thesis, University of Reading. doi: https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00112572 <https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00112572> Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2023 ftunivreading https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00112572 2023-08-14T18:18:53Z Earth system models have become viable alternatives to traditional hydrological models in supporting global hydrological forecasting of river flow during the last decades. Hydrological forecasting systems rely on a climatology of flood hazard to derive flood thresholds, which are used to generate early flood warnings. However, the derivation of these climatologies is not straightforward and limitations, errors and uncertainties may play a major role and can significantly influence the quality of the flood warnings. This thesis evaluates some of the crucial characteristics of the reanalysis data sets used to produce the flood hazard climatologies, such as the land data assimilation and snow scheme complexity. Limitations of these data sets are identified, with suggestions presented to further improve the hydrological modelling and threshold generation methodologies. This in turn will lead to improved climatologies as crucial elements in delivering higher quality flood warnings. It was found that increments produced by the land data assimilation of snow and soil moisture can lead to systematic water budget errors and subsequently contribute to significant errors in river discharge simulations. Results have also shown that a more complex snow scheme with multiple layers can generally improve river discharge unless there is permafrost, where improvements required further adjustments of the snow and soil freezing parametrisations. In addition, the linear trend analysis of a state-of-the-art hydrological reanalysis data set revealed widespread, dominantly negative trends globally, that can adversely impact on the use of thresholds in flood warnings, derived from these reanalyses. In order to improve the quality of the flood hazard climatologies, an alternative threshold generation method, using ensemble reforecasts, has been developed and shown to deliver vastly improved forecast reliability and skill. This thesis contributes to better understanding of the global flood hazard climatologies in Earth system models and ... Thesis permafrost CentAUR: Central Archive at the University of Reading
institution Open Polar
collection CentAUR: Central Archive at the University of Reading
op_collection_id ftunivreading
language English
description Earth system models have become viable alternatives to traditional hydrological models in supporting global hydrological forecasting of river flow during the last decades. Hydrological forecasting systems rely on a climatology of flood hazard to derive flood thresholds, which are used to generate early flood warnings. However, the derivation of these climatologies is not straightforward and limitations, errors and uncertainties may play a major role and can significantly influence the quality of the flood warnings. This thesis evaluates some of the crucial characteristics of the reanalysis data sets used to produce the flood hazard climatologies, such as the land data assimilation and snow scheme complexity. Limitations of these data sets are identified, with suggestions presented to further improve the hydrological modelling and threshold generation methodologies. This in turn will lead to improved climatologies as crucial elements in delivering higher quality flood warnings. It was found that increments produced by the land data assimilation of snow and soil moisture can lead to systematic water budget errors and subsequently contribute to significant errors in river discharge simulations. Results have also shown that a more complex snow scheme with multiple layers can generally improve river discharge unless there is permafrost, where improvements required further adjustments of the snow and soil freezing parametrisations. In addition, the linear trend analysis of a state-of-the-art hydrological reanalysis data set revealed widespread, dominantly negative trends globally, that can adversely impact on the use of thresholds in flood warnings, derived from these reanalyses. In order to improve the quality of the flood hazard climatologies, an alternative threshold generation method, using ensemble reforecasts, has been developed and shown to deliver vastly improved forecast reliability and skill. This thesis contributes to better understanding of the global flood hazard climatologies in Earth system models and ...
format Thesis
author Zsoter, Ervin
spellingShingle Zsoter, Ervin
Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings
author_facet Zsoter, Ervin
author_sort Zsoter, Ervin
title Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings
title_short Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings
title_full Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings
title_fullStr Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings
title_full_unstemmed Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings
title_sort understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings
publishDate 2023
url https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/1/Zsoter_thesis.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/2/Zsoter_form.pdf
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
op_relation https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/1/Zsoter_thesis.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112572/2/Zsoter_form.pdf
Zsoter, Ervin (2023) Understanding global flood hazard climatology for improved early flood warnings. PhD thesis, University of Reading. doi: https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00112572 <https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00112572>
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00112572
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