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Urban Resilience to Flooding: Triangulation of Methods for Hazard Identification in Urban Areas

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dc.contributor.author Almeida, M. C. pt_BR
dc.contributor.author Telhado, M. pt_BR
dc.contributor.author Morais, M. pt_BR
dc.contributor.author Barreiro, J. pt_BR
dc.contributor.author Lopes, R. pt_BR
dc.date.accessioned 2020-04-28T20:30:00Z pt_BR
dc.date.accessioned 2020-06-01T08:46:03Z
dc.date.available 2020-04-28T20:30:00Z pt_BR
dc.date.available 2020-06-01T08:46:03Z
dc.date.issued 2020-03 pt_BR
dc.identifier.citation doi:10.3390/su12062227 pt_BR
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.lnec.pt/jspui/handle/123456789/1012588
dc.description.abstract The effects of climate dynamics on urban areas involve the aggravation of existing conditions and the potential for emergence of new hazards or risk factors. Floods are recognized as a leading source of consequences to society, including disruption of critical functions in urban areas, and to the environment. Consideration of the interplay between services providers ensuring urban functions is essential to deal with climate dynamics and associated risks. Assessment of resilience to multiple hazards requires integrated and multi-sectoral approaches embracing each strategic urban sector and interactions between them. A common limitation resides in the limited data and tools available for undertaking these complex assessments. The paper proposes a methodology to undertake the spatial characterization of the flood related hazards and exposure of both essential functions and services providers in urban areas, in the context of limitations in data and in ready-to-use tools. Results support the resilience assessment of these hazards, taking into account interdependencies and cascading effects. The approach is applied to Lisbon city as the study case. Results are promising in demonstrating the potential of combining data and knowledge from different sources with dual modelling approaches, allowing us to obtain trends on the magnitude of effects of climate scenarios and to assess potential benefits of adaptation strategies. Quantification of the effects is reached, but results need to be assessed together with the underlying levels of uncertainty. The methodology can facilitate dialogue among stakeholders and between different decision levels pt_BR
dc.language.iso eng pt_BR
dc.publisher MDPI pt_BR
dc.rights restrictedAccess pt_BR
dc.subject Climate change pt_BR
dc.subject Flooding pt_BR
dc.subject Hazard mapping pt_BR
dc.subject Risk identification pt_BR
dc.subject Sustainability pt_BR
dc.subject Urban resilience pt_BR
dc.title Urban Resilience to Flooding: Triangulation of Methods for Hazard Identification in Urban Areas pt_BR
dc.type workingPaper pt_BR
dc.identifier.localedicao Basel, Switzerland pt_BR
dc.description.pages 18pp. pt_BR
dc.description.volume Vol 12 Issue 6 pt_BR
dc.description.sector DHA/NES pt_BR
dc.description.magazine Sustainability pt_BR
dc.contributor.peer-reviewed SIM pt_BR
dc.contributor.academicresearchers NAO pt_BR
dc.contributor.arquivo NAO pt_BR


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