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Study ranks cities' flood vulnerability
by Staff Writers
Leeds, England (UPI) Aug 21, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Of the world's cities, Shanghai is the most vulnerable to serious flooding, a study by European researchers suggests.

Researchers from the Netherlands and the University of Leeds in England studied nine coastal cities around the world and used that information to devise a new method to calculate the flood vulnerability of cities.

The method includes measuring the level of economic activity in a city, its speed of recovery, and social issues such as the number of flood shelters, the awareness of people about flood risks and the number of disabled people in the population, a Leeds release said Tuesday.

The study analyzed the vulnerability to coastal flooding of nine cities built on river deltas: Casablanca (Morocco), Calcutta (India), Dhaka (Bangladesh), Buenos Aires (Argentina), Osaka (Japan), Shanghai (China), Manila (Philippines), Marseille (France) and Rotterdam (the Netherlands).

The highly prosperous Shanghai is more vulnerable than much poorer cities such as Dhaka, the study found.

"Vulnerability is a complex issue," Leeds researcher Nigel Wright said. "It is not just about your exposure to flooding, but the effect it actually has on communities and business and how much a major flood disrupts economic activity.

"Our index looks at how cities are prepared for the worst -- for example, do they have flood defenses, do they have buildings that are easy to clean up and repair after the flood? It is important to know how quickly a city can recover from a major flood."

Shanghai's is particularly vulnerable because it is exposed to powerful storm surges and the land is subsiding as sea levels rise, the researchers said.

"A 1-in-100-year flood in Shanghai would lead to widespread damage, with serious consequences for the city, across China and, through wider economic links, for the whole world," Wright said.

The study was published in the journal Natural Hazards.

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Thirty-one killed since July in Niger floods: UN
Niamey (AFP) Aug 21, 2012 - At least 31 people have been killed and nearly 100,000 more left homeless by severe flooding that has affected Niger since mid-July, the UN's humanitarian affairs office said Tuesday.

"Floods are affecting all regions of the country. We have a provisional death toll of at least 31 and we are nearing 100,000 homeless across the country," said Modibo Traore, head of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) branch in the Nigerien capital Niamey.

After visiting some of the affected areas on Monday, President Mahamadou Issou pledged 1,400 tonnes of food and 900,000 euros ($1.1 million) in aid but admitted it would not be enough.

"That will not suffice. I am calling on our partners to help us overcome this difficult situation," he said.

Opposition leader Seini Oumarou has criticised government "inertia" in handing out aid.

The southern Dosso region is among the worst affected in the land-locked country, said OCHA, with nearly 70,000 displaced people and three deaths last week.

OCHA warned that flooding will have "a negative effect on the food situation" in Niger, which sits in the semi-arid Sahel belt running across Africa, separating Sahara from savannah.

Millions of people are going hungry in the region after crops failed across a massive swathe of eight countries because of late and erratic rains last year.



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SHAKE AND BLOW
New storm brings flashfloods, landslides to Philippines
Manila (AFP) Aug 20, 2012
Tropical Storm Tembin brought heavy rains, triggering landslides and flashfloods in the northern Philippines, just weeks after a series of deadly storms and monsoon rains, the government said Monday. The storm, which was expected to intensify into a typhoon, remained almost stationary off the northern tip of the main Philippine island of Luzon, battering the mountainous region with powerful ... read more


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