Increasing numbers of people live in flood-prone areas worldwide. With continued development, flooding will become more frequent. Acceleration of the hydrological cycle and sea-level rise resulting from climate change could worsen the problem. We must therefore address the social, economic and political factors that force or allow some people to inhabit high-risk areas.
For example, monsoon flooding last year of Thailand's Chao Phraya River caused damage to Bangkok and surrounding areas estimated at US$45 billion. A failure to prepare for this recurrent hazard, which has occurred in each of the past four decades, is partly to blame.
Short-term engineering approaches are not enough. Building higher dykes or cascades of dual-purpose dams may maximize water storage and reduce flood risk, but they can make people complacent and thus more vulnerable to floods.
Long-term development solutions are needed. Vulnerable cities need to be redesigned, for example by supplying transport links to metropolitan areas on higher ground.
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Ziegler, A. Reduce urban flood vulnerability. Nature 481, 145 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1038/481145b
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/481145b
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