Assessing climate change impacts on housing flood risk in the Philippines
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Masters by ResearchAuthor/s
Besarra, IsaacAbstract
The Philippines has made proactive efforts to mainstream climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. However, the absence of national repositories to capture regional vulnerability data and incorporate future climate projections has created significant gaps in efforts ...
See moreThe Philippines has made proactive efforts to mainstream climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. However, the absence of national repositories to capture regional vulnerability data and incorporate future climate projections has created significant gaps in efforts to formulate climate change adaptation plans at the local level. This research empirically derives localised housing fragility and vulnerability functions collected from 394 post-flood damaged households across the Province of Leyte. These functions offer new knowledge of the relationships between flood inundation and expected damage to housing. Vulnerability functions are then integrated with projected flood models in the Municipality of Carigara, to understand how climate change influences local flood risk at a household level. Findings from the empirical study evaluate three distinct building typologies: (1) light material, (2) elevated light, and (3) concrete material housing structures. The findings highlight that all three building typologies experience minor damage at depths to 1-metre flooding. Concrete structures exhibited the lowest vulnerability, resulting in severe structural damage at depths exceeding 3.5 metres. Combined with the newly obtained understanding of housing vulnerability, climate-projected flood models that incorporate Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 4.5 and 8.5 over the next century assess projected future residential damages from 5-,25-,50- and 100-year flood return periods. The spatiotemporal analysis problematises current notions of increasing flood risk and highlights regional decreases in flood extents and damage in the selected case study site by up to 34% by the end of the century for a 100-year event compared to historical baselines. The results contribute to understanding shifting flood risk dynamics at a local level in the Philippines that were previously unachieved, with implications to enhance local government decision-making.
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See moreThe Philippines has made proactive efforts to mainstream climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. However, the absence of national repositories to capture regional vulnerability data and incorporate future climate projections has created significant gaps in efforts to formulate climate change adaptation plans at the local level. This research empirically derives localised housing fragility and vulnerability functions collected from 394 post-flood damaged households across the Province of Leyte. These functions offer new knowledge of the relationships between flood inundation and expected damage to housing. Vulnerability functions are then integrated with projected flood models in the Municipality of Carigara, to understand how climate change influences local flood risk at a household level. Findings from the empirical study evaluate three distinct building typologies: (1) light material, (2) elevated light, and (3) concrete material housing structures. The findings highlight that all three building typologies experience minor damage at depths to 1-metre flooding. Concrete structures exhibited the lowest vulnerability, resulting in severe structural damage at depths exceeding 3.5 metres. Combined with the newly obtained understanding of housing vulnerability, climate-projected flood models that incorporate Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 4.5 and 8.5 over the next century assess projected future residential damages from 5-,25-,50- and 100-year flood return periods. The spatiotemporal analysis problematises current notions of increasing flood risk and highlights regional decreases in flood extents and damage in the selected case study site by up to 34% by the end of the century for a 100-year event compared to historical baselines. The results contribute to understanding shifting flood risk dynamics at a local level in the Philippines that were previously unachieved, with implications to enhance local government decision-making.
See less
Date
2024Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Engineering, School of Civil EngineeringAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare