Hydrometeorological hazards are caused by extreme meteorological and climate events, such as floods, droughts, hurricanes, tornadoes, or landslides. They account for a dominant fraction of natural hazards and occur in all regions of the world, although the frequency and intensity of certain hazards, and society’s vulnerability to them, differs between regions. Severe storms, strong winds, floods and droughts develop at different spatial and temporal scales, but all can become disasters that cause significant infrastructure damage and claim hundreds of thousands of lives annually worldwide. Oftentimes, multiple hazards can occur simultaneously or trigger cascading impacts from one extreme weather event. For example, in addition to causing injuries, deaths and material damage, a tropical storm can also result in flooding and mudslides, which can disrupt water purification and sewage disposal systems, cause overflow of toxic wastes, and increase propagation of mosquito-borne diseases.
Revised: January 24, 2017 |
Published: August 1, 2016
Citation
Wu H., M. Huang, Q. Tang, D.B. Kirschbaum, and P. Ward. 2016.Hydrometeorological Hazards: Monitoring, Forecasting, Risk Assessment and Socioeconomic Responses.Advances in Meteorology 2016.PNNL-SA-119933.doi:10.1155/2016/2367939