Introductory Activities

Introductory Activities mjg8

Investigating Coastal Community Vulnerability Around the World

The following two pages include a look at coastal communities around the world and their relative vulnerability to coastal flooding, based on research. These materials are important to developing a context for the course and can also form a foundation for the Capstone Project. These pages include Learning Check Points designed to help enhance your understanding. These questions are asked for your benefit; you are encouraged to answer them, since they frequently introduce methods and applications that you will need to use again during graded assessments and in your Capstone. They are not for credit, but you need to take the time to do them, as they are often required knowledge for other assessments.

To get started on the Module 1 Learning Check Points, click the first link below or use the menu.

Learning Check Point: Summarize an Article

Learning Check Point: Summarize an Article Anonymous

Required Reading

Take a few minutes to read Population Plus Climate: Why Coastal Cities Will Face Increased Risks From Floods: A new study names the global cities most at risk of coastal flooding - both today and in a warmer future (Time Magazine, Aug. 20, 2013). After reading the article, please answer the questions below. Note: There is no credit for this activity, but you are expected to know the material for quizzes.

Learning Check Point: Compare Cities

Learning Check Point: Compare Cities Anonymous

Background: World Bank Study – Ranking coastal cities according to the risk of coastal flooding.

In the report published in the journal Nature Climate Change in 2013, authors from the World Bank and other institutions created a ranking system for the vulnerability of coastal cities around the world. In the report, the authors “provide a quantification of present and future flood losses in the 136 largest coastal cities”. (Hallegatte et al, 2013).

The measure used for ranking is Average Annual Loss (caused by flooding). If the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), a measure of the wealth of the community, is factored in, this changes the ranking as a greater proportion of the GDP of poorer communities is likely to be affected by a flooding event. This causes poorer communities to rank higher when the GDP is included in the calculation. It is a known fact that the poor are disproportionately impacted by a catastrophic event such as a flood, as they have less capacity for recovery.

Several factors must be taken into account to calculate a city's vulnerability and to project this vulnerability into the future - see below (those cities with lower country GDP have a greater % of GDP affected by flood loss):

  • the wealth of the city's country (GDP);
  • relative sea level rise in the area;
  • population and population growth trends;
  • property values;
  • flood protection measures;
  • storm frequency in the area.

These factors will be studied in more detail later in the course. In this module, we will explore some of the data from the above-referenced report and take a look at the cities that rank in the top 10 of the 136 cities at risk of coastal flooding.

In Module 1 Lab, you will use Google Earth to “travel” to at least two of these cities to learn what makes them vulnerable.

Activity: Compare Cities - World Bank Study – Ranking of coastal cities' vulnerability to coastal flooding.

To prepare for the Module 1 assessments, read through "Which Coastal Cities Are at Highest Risk of Damaging Floods? New Study Crunches the Numbers" The World Bank, August 19, 2013.

Table 1.1: The two lists of the top 10 of 136 coastal cities, ranked in order of vulnerability.
List A - City - Overall Cost (Average Annual Loss)AAL (US$ Million)List B - City - AAL as of % of City GDPAAL as % of GDP
1. Guangzhou, China6871. Guangzhou, China1.32
2. Miami, USA6722. New Orleans, USA1.21
3. New York, USA6283. Guayaquil, Ecuador.95
4. New Orleans, USA5074. Ho Chi Min City, Vietnam.74
5. Mumbai, India2845. Abidjan, Ivory Coast.72
6. Nagoya, Japan2606. Zhanjiang, China.50
7. Tampa, USA2447. Mumbai, India.47
8. Boston, USA2378. Khulna, Bangladesh.43
9. Shenzhen, China1699. Palembang, Indonesia.39
10. Osaka, Japan12010. Shenzhen, China.38

In List A, the top four cities alone (3 of which are in the US) account for 43% of the forecast total global losses. Highlighted in bold red are the cities that appear on both lists.

See caption.

Map of 20 coastal cities around the world that are ranked by the World Bank as having high rates of flood risk, measured as Average Annual Loss as a percent of GDP. The first 10 correspond to List B in the table above.

Please take a moment to compare lists A and B in Table 1.1 above. When you are ready, answer the questions in the Learning Checkpoint below.

Note: There is no credit for this activity, but you are expected to understand the principles (i.e., don't learn the ranking or the data) for assessments.

Learning Check Point