-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
referencesOriginal.bib
1119 lines (1060 loc) · 89.9 KB
/
referencesOriginal.bib
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
@article{amonkar_heatingcooling:2023,
title = {Differential Effects of Climate Change on Average and Peak Demand for Heating and Cooling across the Contiguous {{USA}}},
author = {Amonkar, Yash and Doss-Gollin, James and Farnham, David J. and Modi, Vijay and Lall, Upmanu},
date = {2023-11-01},
journaltitle = {Communications Earth \& Environment},
shortjournal = {Commun Earth Environ},
volume = {4},
number = {1},
pages = {1--9},
publisher = {Nature Publishing Group},
issn = {2662-4435},
doi = {10.1038/s43247-023-01048-1},
url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-023-01048-1},
urldate = {2023-11-01},
abstract = {While most electricity systems are designed to handle peak demand during summer months, long-term energy pathways consistent with deep decarbonization generally electrify building heating, thus increasing electricity demand during winter. A key question is how climate variability and change will affect peak heating and cooling demand in an electrified future. We conduct a spatially explicit analysis of trends in temperature-based proxies of electricity demand over the past 70\,years. Average annual demand for heating (cooling) decreases (increases) over most of the contiguous US. However, while climate change drives robust increases in peak cooling demand, trends in peak heating demand are generally smaller and less robust. Because the distribution of temperature exhibits a long left tail, severe cold snaps dominate the extremes of thermal demand. As building heating electrifies, system operators must account for these events to ensure reliability.},
issue = {1}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for amonkar_heatingcooling:2023:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("www-nature-com.ezproxy.rice.edu")
% ? unused Short title ("heating cooling")
@article{arribas_assessment:2022,
title = {Climate Risk Assessment Needs Urgent Improvement},
author = {Arribas, Alberto and Fairgrieve, Ross and Dhu, Trevor and Bell, Juliet and Cornforth, Rosalind and Gooley, Geoff and Hilson, Chris J. and Luers, Amy and Shepherd, Theodore G. and Street, Roger and Wood, Nick},
date = {2022-08-25},
journaltitle = {Nature Communications},
shortjournal = {Nat Commun},
volume = {13},
number = {1},
pages = {4326},
publisher = {Nature Publishing Group},
issn = {2041-1723},
doi = {10.1038/s41467-022-31979-w},
url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-31979-w},
urldate = {2023-03-23},
abstract = {Existing constraints in current climate risk assessments make them inappropriate to effectively assess the true exposure of society and businesses to climate-related risk. Using the key constraints to guide a conceptual framework, we identify four cross-cutting and inter-related critical paths for improvement.},
issue = {1}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for arribas_assessment:2022:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("www.nature.com")
% ? unused Short title ("assessment")
@article{arrow_discount:2013,
title = {Determining Benefits and Costs for Future Generations},
author = {Arrow, K. and Cropper, M. and Gollier, C. and Groom, B. and Heal, G. and Newell, R. and Nordhaus, W. and Pindyck, R. and Pizer, W. and Portney, P. and Sterner, T. and Tol, R. S. J. and Weitzman, M.},
date = {2013-07-26},
journaltitle = {Science},
volume = {341},
number = {6144},
eprint = {23888025},
eprinttype = {pmid},
pages = {349--350},
publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science},
issn = {0036-8075, 1095-9203},
doi = {10.1126/science.1235665},
url = {https://science.sciencemag.org/content/341/6144/349},
urldate = {2020-04-30},
abstract = {In economic project analysis, the rate at which future benefits and costs are discounted relative to current values often determines whether a project passes the benefit-cost test. This is especially true of projects with long time horizons, such as those to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Whether the benefits of climate policies, which can last for centuries, outweigh the costs, many of which are borne today, is especially sensitive to the rate at which future benefits are discounted. This is also true of other policies, e.g., affecting nuclear waste disposal or the construction of long-lived infrastructure. The United States and others should consider adopting a different approach to estimating costs and benefits in light of uncertainty. The United States and others should consider adopting a different approach to estimating costs and benefits in light of uncertainty.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for arrow_discount:2013:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% 'issn': not a valid ISSN
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("science.sciencemag.org")
% ? unused Section ("Policy Forum")
% ? unused Short title ("discount")
@book{asce_infrastructure_climate:2021,
title = {Impacts of Future Weather and Climate Extremes on {{United States}} Infrastructure: Assessing and Prioritizing Adaptation Actions},
author = {Tye, Mari R. and Giovannettone, Jason P.},
editora = {AghaKouchak, Amir and Beighley, R. Edward and Capehart, William J. and Fehrenbacher, Noah J. and Fields, Robert E. and Huang, Joshua and Kaatz, Laurna and Lin, Ning and Llewellyn, Dagmar and MacClune, Karen and Olsen, J. Rolf and Pinson, Ariane O. and Shi, Ting and Vahedifard, Farshid},
editoratype = {collaborator},
date = {2021-10-13},
publisher = {American Society of Civil Engineers},
location = {Reston, VA},
doi = {10.1061/9780784415863},
url = {https://ascelibrary.org/doi/book/10.1061/9780784415863},
urldate = {2022-11-14},
isbn = {978-0-7844-1586-3 978-0-7844-8372-5}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for asce_infrastructure_climate:2021:
% 'isbn': not a valid ISBN
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("DOI.org (Crossref)")
% ? unused Short title ("infrastructure_climate")
@article{bankes_exploratory:1993,
title = {Exploratory Modeling for Policy Analysis},
author = {Bankes, Steve},
date = {1993-06-01},
journaltitle = {Operations Research},
shortjournal = {Operations Research},
volume = {41},
number = {3},
pages = {435--449},
issn = {0030-364X},
doi = {10/c7rgcr},
url = {https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/abs/10.1287/opre.41.3.435},
urldate = {2019-02-19},
abstract = {Exploratory modeling is using computational experiments to assist in reasoning about systems where there is significant uncertainty. While frequently confused with the use of models to consolidate knowledge into a package that is used to predict system behavior, exploratory modeling is a very different kind of use, requiring a different methodology for model development. This paper distinguishes these two broad classes of model use describes some of the approaches used in exploratory modeling, and suggests some technological innovations needed to facilitate it.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for bankes_exploratory:1993:
% ? unused Library catalog ("pubsonline.informs.org (Atypon)")
% ? unused Short title ("exploratory")
@article{bonnafous_waterrisk:2017,
title = {A Water Risk Index for Portfolio Exposure to Climatic Extremes: Conceptualization and an Application to the Mining Industry},
author = {Bonnafous, Luc and Lall, Upmanu and Siegel, Jason},
date = {2017},
journaltitle = {Hydrology and Earth System Sciences},
volume = {21},
number = {4},
pages = {2075--2106},
doi = {10/f96k67},
url = {https://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/21/2075/2017/},
abstract = {Corporations, industries and non-governmental organizations have become increasingly concerned with growing water risks in many parts of the world. Most of the focus has been on water scarcity and competition for the resource between agriculture, urban users, ecology and industry. However, water risks are multi-dimensional. Water-related hazards include flooding due to extreme rainfall, persistent drought and pollution, either due to industrial operations themselves, or to the failure of infrastructure. Most companies have risk management plans at each operational location to address these risks to a certain design level. The residual risk may or may not be managed, and is typically not quantified at a portfolio scale, i.e. across many sites. Given that climate is the driver of many of these extreme events, and there is evidence of quasi-periodic climate regimes at inter-annual and decadal timescales, it is possible that a portfolio is subject to persistent, multi-year exceedances of the design level. In other words, for a multi-national corporation, it is possible that there is correlation in the climate-induced portfolio water risk across its operational sites as multiple sites may experience a hazard beyond the design level in a given year. Therefore, from an investor's perspective, a need exists for a water risk index that allows for an exploration of the possible space and/or time clustering in exposure across many sites contained in a portfolio. This paper represents a first attempt to develop an index for financial exposure of a geographically diversified, global portfolio to the time-varying risk of climatic extremes using long daily global rainfall datasets derived from climate re-analysis models. Focusing on extreme daily rainfall amounts and using examples from major mining companies, we illustrate how the index can be developed. We discuss how companies can use it to explore their corporate exposure, and what they may need to disclose to investors and regulators to promote transparency as to risk exposure and mitigation efforts. For the examples of mining companies provided, we note that the actual exposure is substantially higher than would be expected in the absence of space and time correlation of risk as is usually tacitly assumed. We also find evidence for the increasing exposure to climate-induced risk, and for decadal variability in exposure. The relative vulnerability of different portfolios to multiple extreme events in a given year is also demonstrated.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for bonnafous_waterrisk:2017:
% ? unused Language ("English")
% ? unused Short title ("water risk")
@article{busby_cascadingrisks:2021,
title = {Cascading Risks: {{Understanding}} the 2021 Winter Blackout in {{Texas}}},
author = {Busby, Joshua W. and Baker, Kyri and Bazilian, Morgan D. and Gilbert, Alex Q. and Grubert, Emily and Rai, Varun and Rhodes, Joshua D. and Shidore, Sarang and Smith, Caitlin A. and Webber, Michael E.},
date = {2021-07-01},
journaltitle = {Energy Research \& Social Science},
shortjournal = {Energy Research \& Social Science},
volume = {77},
pages = {102106},
publisher = {Elsevier},
location = {Amsterdam},
issn = {2214-6296},
doi = {10.1016/j.erss.2021.102106},
url = {outage},
urldate = {2021-06-03},
abstract = {The Texas freeze of February 2021 left more than 4.5 million customers (more than 10 million people) without electricity at its peak, some for several days. The freeze had cascading effects on other services reliant upon electricity including drinking water treatment and medical services. Economic losses from lost output and damage are estimated to be \$130 billion in Texas alone. In the wake of the freeze, there has been major fallout among regulators and utilities as actors sought to apportion blame and utilities and generators began to settle up accounts. This piece offers a retrospective on what caused the blackouts and the knock-on effects on other services, the subsequent financial and political effects of the freeze, and the implications for Texas and the country going forward. Texas failed to sufficiently winterize its electricity and gas systems after 2011. Feedback between failures in the two systems made the situation worse. Overall, the state faced outages of 30 GW of electricity as demand reached unprecedented highs. The gap between production and demand forced the non-profit grid manager, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), to cut off supply to millions of customers or face a systems collapse that by some accounts was minutes away. The 2021 freeze suggests a need to rethink the state’s regulatory approach to energy to avoid future such outcomes. Weatherization, demand response, and expanded interstate interconnections are potential solutions Texas should consider to avoid generation losses, reduce demand, and tap neighboring states’ capacity.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for busby_cascadingrisks:2021:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% Unexpected field 'location'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("ScienceDirect")
% ? unused Short title ("Cascading risks")
@online{condon_climateservices:2023,
type = {SSRN Scholarly Paper},
title = {Climate Services: The Business of Physical Risk},
author = {Condon, Madison},
date = {2023-03-22},
number = {4396826},
location = {Rochester, NY},
url = {https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=4396826},
urldate = {2023-03-22},
abstract = {A growing number of investors, insurers, financial services providers, and nonprofits rely on information about localized physical climate risks, like floods, hurricanes, and wildfires. The outcomes of these risk projections have significant consequences in the economy, including allocating investment capital, impacting housing prices and demographic shifts, and prioritizing adaptation infrastructure projects. The climate risk information available to individual citizens and municipalities, however, is limited and expensive to access. Further, many providers of climate services use black box models that make overseeing the scientific rigor of their methodologies impossible— a concern given scientific critiques that many may be obfuscating the uncertainty in their projections. Municipalities that want to challenge insurance and bond rating determinations must rally significant resources for modeling and data, a scattershot policing method at best. And when companies have access to sophisticated modeling about future impacts— some of them potentially devastating for entire communities—the decision to share that information has been largely left up to the corporation.This Article argues that actionable and transparent information about our climate-changed future is a public good that the private sector cannot be depended upon to provide equitably or reliably. Further, all private climate services rely on upstream climate data and models that were collected and produced by an enormous network of public institutions. There are important lessons to be learned from the recent success of special interests in pressing for the privatization of weather data and services—a trend that has knock-on effects for weather forecasts globally. This Article urges state and federal governments to invest in their own climate services capacity at a scale not currently contemplated. Risk assessments lacking a scientific basis can lead to maladaptation across the economy. While it is a potentially limited matter of consumer protection or tort liability when a consultancy over-promises its analytical capabilities, it is a much larger problem if regulators themselves misunderstand the limits of uncertainty when designing risk oversight.},
pubstate = {preprint}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for condon_climateservices:2023:
% Unexpected field 'type'
% Unexpected field 'number'
% Unexpected field 'location'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Social Science Research Network")
% ? unused Short title ("Climate Services")
@article{condon_myopia:2021,
ids = {condon_:2022},
title = {Market Myopia's Climate Bubble},
author = {Condon, Madison},
date = {2021-02-09},
doi = {10.2139/ssrn.3782675},
url = {https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=3782675},
urldate = {2021-04-13},
abstract = {A growing number of financial institutions, ranging from BlackRock to the Bank of England, have warned that markets may not be accurately incorporating climate change-related risks into asset prices. This Article seeks to explain how this mispricing can exist at the level of individual assets drawing from scholarship on corporate governance and the mechanisms of market (in)efficiency. Market actors: 1. Lack the fine-grained asset-level data they need in order to assess risk exposure; 2. Continue to rely on outdated means of assessing risk; 3. Have misaligned incentives resulting in climate-specific agency costs; 4. Have myopic biases exacerbated by climate change misinformation; and 5. Are impeded by captured regulators distorting the market. Further, trends in institutional share ownership reinforce apathy regarding assessment of firm-specific fundamentals, especially over long-term horizons. This underpricing of corporate climate risk contributes to the negative effects of climate change itself, as the mispricing of risk in the present leads to a misallocation of investment capital, hindering future adaptation and subsidizing future fossil combustion. These risks could accumulate to the macroeconomic scale, generating a systemic risk to the financial system. While a broad array of government interventions are necessary to mitigate climate related financial risks, this Article focuses on proposals for corporate governance and securities regulation—and their limits. Signals from the Biden Administration suggest that mandatory climate risk disclosure regulation from the Securities and Exchange Commission is forthcoming. This Article argues that climate risk disclosure is necessary, though alone not sufficient, to address the widespread disregard of corporate climate exposure.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for condon_myopia:2021:
% Missing required field 'journaltitle'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("papers.ssrn.com")
% ? unused Short title ("myopia")
@article{deconto_antarctica:2016,
title = {Contribution of {{Antarctica}} to Past and Future Sea-Level Rise},
author = {DeConto, Robert M. and Pollard, David},
date = {2016-03},
journaltitle = {Nature},
shortjournal = {Nature},
volume = {531},
number = {7596},
pages = {591--597},
issn = {1476-4687},
doi = {10.1038/nature17145},
url = {http://www.nature.com/articles/nature17145},
urldate = {2020-02-20},
abstract = {Climate and ice-sheet modelling that includes ice fracture dynamics reveals that Antarctica could contribute more than a metre of sea-level rise by 2100 and more than 13\,metres by 2500, if greenhouse gas emissions continue unabated.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for deconto_antarctica:2016:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("www-nature-com.ezproxy.cul.columbia.edu")
% ? unused Short title ("antarctica")
@article{demoel_reducing:2014,
title = {Evaluating the Effect of Flood Damage-Reducing Measures: A Case Study of the Unembanked Area of {{Rotterdam}}, the {{Netherlands}}},
author = {de Moel, Hans and van Vliet, Mathijs and Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.},
date = {2014-06-01},
journaltitle = {Regional Environmental Change},
shortjournal = {Reg Environ Change},
volume = {14},
number = {3},
pages = {895--908},
issn = {1436-378X},
doi = {10.1007/s10113-013-0420-z},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-013-0420-z},
urldate = {2021-03-16},
abstract = {Empirical evidence of increasing flood damages and the prospect of climatic change has initiated discussions in the flood management community on how to effectively manage flood risks. In the Netherlands, the framework of multi-layer safety (MLS) has been introduced to support this risk-based approach. The MLS framework consists of three layers: (i) prevention, (ii) spatial planning and (iii) evacuation. This paper presents a methodology to evaluate measures in the second layer, such as wet proofing, dry proofing or elevating buildings. The methodology uses detailed land-use data for the area around the city of Rotterdam (up to building level) that has recently become available. The vulnerability of these detailed land-use classes to flooding is assessed using the stage–damage curves from different international models. The methodology is demonstrated using a case study in the unembanked area of Rotterdam in the Netherlands, as measures from the second layer may be particularly effective there. The results show that the flood risk in the region is considerable: EUR 36 million p.a. A large part (almost 60~\%) of this risk results from industrial land use, emphasising the need to give this category more attention in flood risk assessments. It was found that building level measures could substantially reduce flood risks in the region because of the relatively low inundation levels of buildings. Risk to residential buildings would be reduced by 40~\% if all buildings would be wet-proofed, by 89~\% if all buildings would be dry-proofed and elevating buildings over 100~cm would render the risk almost zero. While climate change could double the risk in 2100, such building level measures could easily nullify this effect. Despite the high potential of such measures, actual implementation is still limited. This is partly caused by the lack of knowledge regarding these measures by most Dutch companies and the legal impossibility for municipalities to enforce most of these measures as they would go beyond the building codes established at the national level.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for demoel_reducing:2014:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Springer Link")
% ? unused Short title ("reducing")
@article{deneufville_parkinggarage:2006,
title = {Real {{Options}} by {{Spreadsheet}}: {{Parking Garage Case Example}}},
author = {de Neufville, Richard and Scholtes, Stefan and Wang, Tao},
date = {2006},
journaltitle = {Journal of Infrastructure Systems},
shortjournal = {Journal of Infrastructure Systems},
volume = {12},
number = {2},
pages = {107--111},
doi = {10.1061/(asce)1076-0342(2006)12:2(107)},
url = {https://ascelibrary.org/doi/abs/10.1061/(ASCE)1076-0342(2006)12:2(107)},
urldate = {2018-12-15}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for deneufville_parkinggarage:2006:
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused Library catalog ("ascelibrary.org (Atypon)")
% ? unused Short title ("parking garage")
@article{doss-gollin_review:2023,
title = {Improving the Representation of Climate Risks in Long-Term Electricity Systems Planning: A Critical Review},
author = {Doss-Gollin, James and Amonkar, Yash and Schmeltzer, Katlyn and Cohan, Daniel},
date = {2023-08-16},
journaltitle = {Current Sustainable/Renewable Energy Reports},
shortjournal = {Curr Sustainable Renewable Energy Rep},
issn = {2196-3010},
doi = {10.1007/s40518-023-00224-3},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s40518-023-00224-3},
urldate = {2023-08-16},
abstract = {Purpose of Review Electricity systems face substantial climate risks which are escalating due to electrification, renewable energy intermittency, population changes, and the intensifying impacts of climate change such as extreme temperatures and weather-induced infrastructure damage. This critical review investigates climate risks to the electricity sector and scrutinizes the methodologies used to represent climate risk in long-term electricity system planning studies. Recent Findings Climate risks to electricity systems are driven by extreme weather, average weather, technology, and other social and technological factors. All are expected to evolve in the future. Future climate risks to electricity systems depend on interactions between each, and thus assessing future climate risks to electricity systems requires exploring a wide range of possible futures. Summary Many studies rely on weather data and socio-economic scenarios that are inadequate to fully characterize climate risks to present and future electricity systems. We advocate for more holistic assessments that incorporate comprehensive weather data, acknowledge dynamic multi-sector interactions, and employ adaptive and robust methodologies.},
preprint = {https://eartharxiv.org/repository/view/5684/}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for doss-gollin_review:2023:
% Unexpected field 'preprint'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Springer Link")
% ? unused Short title ("review")
@article{doss-gollin_subjective:2022,
title = {A Subjective {{Bayesian}} Framework for Synthesizing Deep Uncertainties in Climate Risk Management},
author = {Doss-Gollin, James and Keller, Klaus},
date = {2023-01},
journaltitle = {Earth's Future},
volume = {11},
number = {1},
issn = {2328-4277},
doi = {10.1029/2022EF003044},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2022EF003044},
urldate = {2022-12-31},
abstract = {Projections of nonstationary climate risks can vary considerably from one source to another, posing considerable communication and decision-analytical challenges. One such challenge is how to present trade-offs under deep uncertainty in a salient and interpretable manner. Some common approaches include analyzing a small subset of projections or treating all considered projections as equally likely. These approaches can underestimate risks, hide deep uncertainties, and are mostly silent on which assumptions drive decision-relevant outcomes. Here we introduce and demonstrate a transparent Bayesian framework for synthesizing deep uncertainties to inform climate risk management. The first step of this workflow is to generate an ensemble of simulations representing possible futures and analyze them through standard exploratory modeling techniques. Next, a small set of probability distributions representing subjective beliefs about the likelihood of possible futures is used to weight the scenarios. Finally, these weights are used to compute and characterize trade-offs, conduct robustness checks, and reveal implicit assumptions. We demonstrate the framework through a didactic case study analyzing how high to elevate a house to manage coastal flood risks.},
preprint = {https://doi.org/10.1002/essoar.10511798.4},
repo = {https://github.com/jdossgollin/2022-elevation-robustness}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for doss-gollin_subjective:2022:
% Unexpected field 'preprint'
% Unexpected field 'repo'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Wiley Online Library")
% ? unused Short title ("subjective")
@article{doss-gollin_txtreme:2021,
title = {How Unprecedented Was the {{February}} 2021 {{Texas}} Cold Snap?},
author = {Doss-Gollin, James and Farnham, David J. and Lall, Upmanu and Modi, Vijay},
date = {2021-06-08},
journaltitle = {Environmental Research Letters},
shortjournal = {Environ. Res. Lett.},
issn = {1748-9326},
doi = {10.1088/1748-9326/ac0278},
url = {e},
urldate = {2021-05-18},
abstract = {Winter storm Uri brought severe cold to the southern United States in February 2021, causing a cascading failure of interdependent systems in Texas where infrastructure was not adequately prepared for such cold. In particular, the failure of interconnected energy systems restricted electricity supply just as demand for heating spiked, leaving millions of Texans without heat or electricity, many for several days. This motivates the question: did historical storms suggest that such temperatures were known to occur, and if so with what frequency? We compute a temperature-based proxy for heating demand and use this metric to answer the question “what would the aggregate demand for heating have been had historic cold snaps occurred with today’s population?”. We find that local temperatures and the inferred demand for heating per capita across the region served by the Texas Interconnection were more severe during a storm in December 1989 than during February 2021, and that cold snaps in 1951 and 1983 were nearly as severe. Given anticipated population growth, future storms may lead to even greater infrastructure failures if adaptive investments are not made. Further, electricity system managers should prepare for trends in electrification of heating to drive peak annual loads on the Texas Interconnection during severe winter storms.},
open = {true},
preprint = {https://eartharxiv.org/repository/view/2122/},
repo = {https://github.com/jdossgollin/2021-TXtreme}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for doss-gollin_txtreme:2021:
% Unexpected field 'open'
% Unexpected field 'preprint'
% Unexpected field 'repo'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Institute of Physics")
% ? unused Short title ("TXtreme")
@article{ellsberg_ambiguity:1961,
title = {Risk, Ambiguity, and the {{Savage}} Axioms},
author = {Ellsberg, Daniel},
date = {1961-11-01},
journaltitle = {The Quarterly Journal of Economics},
shortjournal = {Q J Econ},
volume = {75},
number = {4},
pages = {643--669},
publisher = {Oxford Academic},
issn = {0033-5533},
doi = {10.2307/1884324},
url = {http://academic.oup.com/qje/article/75/4/643/1913802},
urldate = {2020-04-10},
abstract = {Abstract. I. Are there uncertainties that are not risks? 643. — II. Uncertainties that are not risks, 647. — III. Why are some uncertainties not risks? — 656.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for ellsberg_ambiguity:1961:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("academic-oup-com.ezproxy.cul.columbia.edu")
% ? unused Short title ("ambiguity")
@article{fletcher_mombasa:2019,
title = {Learning about Climate Change Uncertainty Enables Flexible Water Infrastructure Planning},
author = {Fletcher, Sarah and Lickley, Megan and Strzepek, Kenneth},
date = {2019-04-16},
journaltitle = {Nature Communications},
volume = {10},
number = {1},
pages = {1782},
issn = {2041-1723},
doi = {10.1038/s41467-019-09677-x},
url = {http://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-09677-x},
urldate = {2019-04-23},
abstract = {Water resources planning requires infrastructure development consider regional climatic uncertainties. Here the authors introduce a new dynamic planning framework that captures opportunities to learn about climate change over time. By applying it to reservoir planning in Kenya, they show the value of flexible approaches in responding to learning.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for fletcher_mombasa:2019:
% ? unused Language ("En")
% ? unused Short title ("mombasa")
@article{fletcher_waterresourcesequity:2022,
title = {Equity in {{Water Resources Planning}}: {{A Path Forward}} for {{Decision Support Modelers}}},
author = {Fletcher, Sarah and Hadjimichael, Antonia and Quinn, Julianne and Osman, Khalid and Giuliani, Matteo and Gold, David and Figueroa, Anjuli Jain and Gordon, Bethany},
date = {2022-07},
journaltitle = {Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management},
shortjournal = {J. Water Resour. Plann. Manage.},
volume = {148},
number = {7},
pages = {02522005},
issn = {0733-9496, 1943-5452},
doi = {10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0001573},
url = {https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/%28ASCE%29WR.1943-5452.0001573},
urldate = {2023-11-25}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for fletcher_waterresourcesequity:2022:
% 'issn': not a valid ISSN
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("DOI.org (Crossref)")
% ? unused Short title ("water resources equity")
@article{frank_newjersey:2022,
entrysubtype = {newspaper},
title = {Bold {{New Jersey Shore Flood Rules Could Be Blueprint}} for {{Entire U}}.{{S}}. {{Coast}}},
author = {Frank, Thomas},
date = {2022-08-22},
journaltitle = {Scientific American},
url = {https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/bold-new-jersey-shore-flood-rules-could-be-blueprint-for-entire-u-s-coast/},
urldate = {2023-01-11},
abstract = {Coastal flood zones where development is restricted will be based on future climate change projections, not past floods}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for frank_newjersey:2022:
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Short title ("new jersey")
@article{garner_slrise:2018,
title = {Using Direct Policy Search to Identify Robust Strategies in Adapting to Uncertain Sea-Level Rise and Storm Surge},
author = {Garner, Gregory G. and Keller, Klaus},
date = {2018-09-01},
journaltitle = {Environmental Modelling \& Software},
shortjournal = {Environmental Modelling \& Software},
volume = {107},
pages = {96--104},
issn = {1364-8152},
doi = {10.1016/j.envsoft.2018.05.006},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364815217307727},
urldate = {2019-09-17},
abstract = {Sea-level rise poses considerable risks to coastal communities, ecosystems, and infrastructure. Decision makers are faced with uncertain sea-level projections when designing a strategy for coastal adaptation. The traditional methods are often silent on tradeoffs as well as the effects of tail-area events and of potential future learning. Here we reformulate a simple sea-level rise adaptation model to address these concerns. We show that Direct Policy Search yields improved solution quality, with respect to Pareto-dominance in the objectives, over the traditional approach under uncertain sea-level rise projections and storm surge. Additionally, the new formulation produces high quality solutions with less computational demands than an intertemporal optimization approach. Our results illustrate the utility of multi-objective adaptive formulations for the example of coastal adaptation and point to wider-ranging application in climate change adaptation decision problems.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for garner_slrise:2018:
% ? unused Library catalog ("ScienceDirect")
% ? unused Short title ("slrise")
@article{gidaris_multiplehazard:2017,
title = {Multiple-{{Hazard Fragility}} and {{Restoration Models}} of {{Highway Bridges}} for {{Regional Risk}} and {{Resilience Assessment}} in the {{United States}}: {{State-of-the-Art Review}}},
author = {Gidaris, Ioannis and Padgett, Jamie E. and Barbosa, Andre R. and Chen, Suren and Cox, Daniel and Webb, Bret and Cerato, Amy},
date = {2017-03-01},
journaltitle = {Journal of Structural Engineering},
volume = {143},
number = {3},
pages = {04016188},
publisher = {American Society of Civil Engineers},
issn = {1943-541X},
doi = {10.1061/(ASCE)ST.1943-541X.0001672},
url = {https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/%28ASCE%29ST.1943-541X.0001672},
urldate = {2024-01-22},
abstract = {AbstractHighway bridges are one of the most vulnerable constituents of transportation networks when exposed to one or more natural hazards, such as earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, and riverine floods. To facilitate and enhance prehazard and posthazard ...}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for gidaris_multiplehazard:2017:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused Language ("EN")
% ? unused Library catalog ("ASCE")
% ? unused Short title ("multiple hazard")
@article{gilligan_beyondwickedness:2020,
title = {Beyond Wickedness: Managing Complex Systems and Climate Change},
author = {Gilligan, Jonathan M. and Vandenbergh, Michael P.},
date = {2020},
journaltitle = {Vanderbilt Law Review},
shortjournal = {Vand. L. Rev.},
volume = {73},
pages = {1777--1810},
url = {https://wp0.vanderbilt.edu/lawreview/2020/12/beyond-wickedness-managing-complex-systems-and-climate-change/},
urldate = {2020-12-23}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for gilligan_beyondwickedness:2020:
% ? unused Short title ("Beyond Wickedness")
@article{herman_control:2020,
title = {Climate Adaptation as a Control Problem: {{Review}} and Perspectives on Dynamic Water Resources Planning under Uncertainty},
author = {Herman, Jonathan D. and Quinn, Julianne D. and Steinschneider, Scott and Giuliani, Matteo and Fletcher, Sarah},
date = {2020-01-07},
journaltitle = {Water Resources Research},
pages = {e24389},
issn = {1944-7973},
doi = {10.1029/2019wr025502},
url = {http://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2019WR025502},
urldate = {2020-01-11},
abstract = {Climate change introduces substantial uncertainty to water resources planning, and raises the key question: when, or under what conditions, should adaptation occur? A number of recent studies aim to identify policies mapping future observations to actions—in other words, framing climate adaptation as an optimal control problem. This paper uses the control paradigm to review and classify recent dynamic planning studies according to their approaches to uncertainty characterization, policy structure, and solution methods. We propose a set of research gaps and opportunities in this area centered on the challenge of characterizing uncertainty, which prevents the unambiguous application of control methods to this problem. These include: exogenous uncertainty in forcing, model structure, and parameters propagated through a chain of climate and hydrologic models; endogenous uncertainty in human-environmental system dynamics across multiple scales; and sampling uncertainty due to the finite length of historical observations and future projections. Recognizing these challenges, several opportunities exist to improve the use of control methods for climate adaptation, namely: how problem context and understanding of climate processes might assist with uncertainty quantification and experimental design; out-of-sample validation and robustness of optimized adaptation policies; and monitoring and data assimilation, including trend detection, Bayesian inference, and indicator variable selection. We conclude with a summary of recommendations for dynamic water resources planning under climate change through the lens of optimal control.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for herman_control:2020:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Wiley Online Library")
% ? unused Short title ("control")
@article{herman_robustness:2015,
title = {How Should Robustness Be Defined for Water Systems Planning under Change?},
author = {Herman, Jonathan D. and Reed, Patrick M. and Zeff, Harrison B. and Characklis, Gregory W.},
date = {2015-10-01},
journaltitle = {Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management},
shortjournal = {Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management},
volume = {141},
number = {10},
pages = {04015012},
doi = {10.1061/(asce)wr.1943-5452.0000509},
url = {http://ascelibrary.org/doi/abs/10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0000509},
urldate = {2018-12-22}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for herman_robustness:2015:
% ? unused Library catalog ("ascelibrary-org.ezproxy.cul.columbia.edu (Atypon)")
@article{jongman_exposure:2012,
title = {Global Exposure to River and Coastal Flooding: Long Term Trends and Changes},
author = {Jongman, Brenden and Ward, Philip J and Aerts, Jeroen C J H},
date = {2012-10},
journaltitle = {Global Environmental Change},
volume = {22},
number = {4},
pages = {823--835},
doi = {10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2012.07.004},
url = {http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0959378012000830}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for jongman_exposure:2012:
% ? unused Language ("English")
% ? unused Short title ("exposure")
@article{kasprzyk_mordm:2013,
title = {Many Objective Robust Decision Making for Complex Environmental Systems Undergoing Change},
author = {Kasprzyk, Joseph R. and Nataraj, Shanthi and Reed, Patrick M. and Lempert, Robert J.},
date = {2013-04-01},
journaltitle = {Environmental Modelling \& Software},
shortjournal = {Environmental Modelling \& Software},
volume = {42},
pages = {55--71},
issn = {1364-8152},
doi = {10.1016/j.envsoft.2012.12.007},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364815212003131},
urldate = {2018-12-29},
abstract = {This paper introduces many objective robust decision making (MORDM). MORDM combines concepts and methods from many objective evolutionary optimization and robust decision making (RDM), along with extensive use of interactive visual analytics, to facilitate the management of complex environmental systems. Many objective evolutionary search is used to generate alternatives for complex planning problems, enabling the discovery of the key tradeoffs among planning objectives. RDM then determines the robustness of planning alternatives to deeply uncertain future conditions and facilitates decision makers' selection of promising candidate solutions. MORDM tests each solution under the ensemble of future extreme states of the world (SOW). Interactive visual analytics are used to explore whether solutions of interest are robust to a wide range of plausible future conditions (i.e., assessment of their Pareto satisficing behavior in alternative SOW). Scenario discovery methods that use statistical data mining algorithms are then used to identify what assumptions and system conditions strongly influence the cost-effectiveness, efficiency, and reliability of the robust alternatives. The framework is demonstrated using a case study that examines a single city's water supply in the Lower Rio Grande Valley (LRGV) in Texas, USA. Results suggest that including robustness as a decision criterion can dramatically change the formulation of complex environmental management problems as well as the negotiated selection of candidate alternatives to implement. MORDM also allows decision makers to characterize the most important vulnerabilities for their systems, which should be the focus of ex post monitoring and identification of triggers for adaptive management.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for kasprzyk_mordm:2013:
% ? unused Library catalog ("ScienceDirect")
% ? unused Short title ("mordm")
@article{keller_management:2021,
title = {Climate Risk Management},
author = {Keller, Klaus and Helgeson, Casey and Srikrishnan, Vivek},
date = {2021},
journaltitle = {Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences},
volume = {49},
number = {1},
pages = {95--116},
publisher = {Annual Reviews},
issn = {0084-6597},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-earth-080320-055847}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for keller_management:2021:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? unused Short title ("management")
@article{kopp_evolving:2017,
title = {Evolving Understanding of {{Antarctic}} Ice-Sheet Physics and Ambiguity in Probabilistic Sea-Level Projections},
author = {Kopp, Robert E. and DeConto, Robert M. and Bader, Daniel A. and Hay, Carling C. and Horton, Radley M. and Kulp, Scott and Oppenheimer, Michael and Pollard, David and Strauss, Benjamin H.},
date = {2017},
journaltitle = {Earth's Future},
volume = {5},
number = {12},
pages = {1217--1233},
issn = {2328-4277},
doi = {10.1002/2017ef000663},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1002/2017ef000663},
urldate = {2020-02-16},
abstract = {Mechanisms such as ice-shelf hydrofracturing and ice-cliff collapse may rapidly increase discharge from marine-based ice sheets. Here, we link a probabilistic framework for sea-level projections to a small ensemble of Antarctic ice-sheet (AIS) simulations incorporating these physical processes to explore their influence on global-mean sea-level (GMSL) and relative sea-level (RSL). We compare the new projections to past results using expert assessment and structured expert elicitation about AIS changes. Under high greenhouse gas emissions (Representative Concentration Pathway [RCP] 8.5), median projected 21st century GMSL rise increases from 79 to 146 cm. Without protective measures, revised median RSL projections would by 2100 submerge land currently home to 153 million people, an increase of 44 million. The use of a physical model, rather than simple parameterizations assuming constant acceleration of ice loss, increases forcing sensitivity: overlap between the central 90\% of simulations for 2100 for RCP 8.5 (93–243 cm) and RCP 2.6 (26–98 cm) is minimal. By 2300, the gap between median GMSL estimates for RCP 8.5 and RCP 2.6 reaches {$>$}10 m, with median RSL projections for RCP 8.5 jeopardizing land now occupied by 950 million people (versus 167 million for RCP 2.6). The minimal correlation between the contribution of AIS to GMSL by 2050 and that in 2100 and beyond implies current sea-level observations cannot exclude future extreme outcomes. The sensitivity of post-2050 projections to deeply uncertain physics highlights the need for robust decision and adaptive management frameworks.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for kopp_evolving:2017:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Wiley Online Library")
% ? unused Short title ("evolving")
@article{kopp_probabilistic:2014,
title = {Probabilistic 21st and 22nd Century Sea-Level Projections at a Global Network of Tide-Gauge Sites},
author = {Kopp, Robert E. and Horton, Radley M. and Little, Christopher M. and Mitrovica, Jerry X. and Oppenheimer, Michael and Rasmussen, D. J. and Strauss, Benjamin H. and Tebaldi, Claudia},
date = {2014},
journaltitle = {Earth's Future},
volume = {2},
number = {8},
pages = {383--406},
issn = {2328-4277},
doi = {10.1002/2014ef000239},
url = {http://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/2014EF000239},
urldate = {2020-02-08},
abstract = {Sea-level rise due to both climate change and non-climatic factors threatens coastal settlements, infrastructure, and ecosystems. Projections of mean global sea-level (GSL) rise provide insufficient information to plan adaptive responses; local decisions require local projections that accommodate different risk tolerances and time frames and that can be linked to storm surge projections. Here we present a global set of local sea-level (LSL) projections to inform decisions on timescales ranging from the coming decades through the 22nd century. We provide complete probability distributions, informed by a combination of expert community assessment, expert elicitation, and process modeling. Between the years 2000 and 2100, we project a very likely (90\% probability) GSL rise of 0.5–1.2 m under representative concentration pathway (RCP) 8.5, 0.4–0.9 m under RCP 4.5, and 0.3–0.8 m under RCP 2.6. Site-to-site differences in LSL projections are due to varying non-climatic background uplift or subsidence, oceanographic effects, and spatially variable responses of the geoid and the lithosphere to shrinking land ice. The Antarctic ice sheet (AIS) constitutes a growing share of variance in GSL and LSL projections. In the global average and at many locations, it is the dominant source of variance in late 21st century projections, though at some sites oceanographic processes contribute the largest share throughout the century. LSL rise dramatically reshapes flood risk, greatly increasing the expected number of “1-in-10” and “1-in-100” year events.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for kopp_probabilistic:2014:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Wiley Online Library")
% ? unused Short title ("Probabilistic")
@inbook{lall_ncawater:2018,
title = {Chapter 3: {{Water}}},
booktitle = {Impacts, {{Risks}}, and {{Adaptation}} in the {{United States}}: {{The Fourth National Climate Assessment}}, {{Volume II}}},
author = {Lall, Upmanu and Johnson, Thomas and Colohan, Peter and Aghakouchak, Amir and Arumugam, Sankar and Brown, Casey and Mccabe, Gregory J. and Pulwarty, Roger S.},
date = {2018},
publisher = {U.S. Global Change Research Program},
location = {Washington, D.C.},
doi = {10.7930/NCA4.2018.CH3},
url = {https://nca2018.globalchange.gov/chapter/3/},
urldate = {2022-10-30},
bookauthor = {Reidmiller, David R. and Easterling, David R. and Kunkel, Kenneth E. and Lewis, Kristin L.M. and Maycock, Thomas K. and Stewart, Brooke C.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for lall_ncawater:2018:
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("DOI.org (Crossref)")
% ? unused Short title ("nca water")
@article{lamontagne_abatement:2019,
title = {Robust Abatement Pathways to Tolerable Climate Futures Require Immediate Global Action},
author = {Lamontagne, J. R. and Reed, P. M. and Marangoni, G. and Keller, K. and Garner, G. G.},
date = {2019-04},
journaltitle = {Nature Climate Change},
shortjournal = {Nat. Clim. Chang.},
volume = {9},
number = {4},
pages = {290--294},
issn = {1758-6798},
doi = {10.1038/s41558-019-0426-8},
url = {http://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-019-0426-8},
urldate = {2019-09-12},
abstract = {Uncertainties are often cited as a reason for mitigation inaction. Here, millions of scenarios are evaluated to assess the relative importance of human–earth system uncertainties and policy variables. The growth rate of global abatement is found to be the primary driver of long-term warming.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for lamontagne_abatement:2019:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("www-nature-com.ezproxy.cul.columbia.edu")
% ? unused Short title ("abatement")
@article{lee_ercot:2022,
title = {The {{Impact}} of {{Neglecting Climate Change}} and {{Variability}} on {{ERCOT}}’s {{Forecasts}} of {{Electricity Demand}} in {{Texas}}},
author = {Lee, Jangho and Dessler, Andrew E.},
date = {2022-04-01},
journaltitle = {Weather, Climate, and Society},
volume = {14},
number = {2},
pages = {499--505},
publisher = {American Meteorological Society},
issn = {1948-8327, 1948-8335},
doi = {10.1175/WCAS-D-21-0140.1},
url = {http://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/wcas/14/2/WCAS-D-21-0140.1.xml},
urldate = {2022-07-03},
abstract = {Abstract The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) manages the electric power across most of Texas. They make short-term assessments of electricity demand on the basis of historical weather over the last two decades, thereby ignoring the effects of climate change and the possibility of weather variability outside the recent historical range. In this paper, we develop an empirical method to predict the impact of weather on energy demand. We use that with a large ensemble of climate model runs to construct a probability distribution of power demand on the ERCOT grid for summer and winter 2021. We find that the most severe weather events will use 100\% of available power—if anything goes wrong, as it did during the 2021 winter, there will not be sufficient available power. More quantitatively, we estimate a 5\% chance that maximum power demand would be within 4.3 and 7.9 GW of ERCOT’s estimate of best-case available resources during summer and winter 2021, respectively, and a 20\% chance it would be within 7.1 and 17 GW. The shortage of power on the ERCOT grid is partially hidden by the fact that ERCOTs seasonal assessments, which are based entirely on historical weather, are too low. Prior to the 2021 winter blackout, ERCOT forecast an extreme peak load of 67 GW. In reality, we estimate hourly peak demand was 82 GW, 22\% above ERCOT’s most extreme forecast and about equal to the best-case available power. Given the high stakes, ERCOT should develop probabilistic estimates using modern scientific tools to predict the range of power demand more accurately.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for lee_ercot:2022:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% 'issn': not a valid ISSN
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused Language ("EN")
% ? unused Library catalog ("journals-ametsoc-org.ezproxy.rice.edu")
% ? unused Short title ("ercot")
@article{lempert_robust:2000,
title = {Robust Strategies for Abating Climate Change},
author = {Lempert, Robert J. and Schlesinger, Michael E.},
date = {2000-06},
journaltitle = {Climatic Change},
volume = {45},
number = {3-4},
pages = {387--401},
publisher = {Springer Nature B.V.},
location = {Dordrecht, Netherlands},
issn = {01650009},
doi = {10.1023/A:1005698407365},
url = {https://www.proquest.com/docview/198492640/abstract/7534863C60614053PQ/1},
urldate = {2022-09-28},
abstract = {The need for climate-change decisionmakers to craft strategies that are robust in the face of an unpredictable future is addressed. The climate-change policymaking community could do policymakers a great service by examining signposts that might provide a better basis for building near-term climate-change policies.},
pagetotal = {387-401}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for lempert_robust:2000:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% Unexpected field 'location'
% Unexpected field 'pagetotal'
% ? unused Language ("English")
% ? unused Library catalog ("ProQuest")
% ? unused Short title ("robust")
@book{loucks_planning:2017,
title = {Water Resource Systems Planning and Management: An Introduction to Methods, Models, and Applications},
author = {Loucks, Daniel P.},
date = {2017},
publisher = {Imprint: Springer},
location = {Cham},
isbn = {978-3-319-44234-1}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for loucks_planning:2017:
% ? unused Short title ("planning")
@article{mcphail_robustness:2019,
title = {Robustness Metrics: How Are They Calculated, When Should They Be Used and Why Do They Give Different Results?},
author = {McPhail, C. and Maier, H. R. and Kwakkel, J. H. and Giuliani, M. and Castelletti, A. and Westra, S.},
date = {2019-04-02},
journaltitle = {Earth's Future},
shortjournal = {Earth's Future},
pages = {169--191},
issn = {2328-4277},
doi = {10.1002/2017ef000649},
url = {http://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/2017EF000649%4010.1002/%28ISSN%292328-4277.RESDEC1},
urldate = {2019-11-20},
abstract = {Abstract Robustness is being used increasingly for decision analysis in relation to deep uncertainty and many metrics have been proposed for its quantification. Recent studies have shown that the application of different robustness metrics can result in different rankings of decision alternatives, but there has been little discussion of what potential causes for this might be. To shed some light on this issue, we present a unifying framework for the calculation of robustness metrics, which assists with understanding how robustness metrics work, when they should be used, and why they sometimes disagree. The framework categorizes the suitability of metrics to a decision-maker based on (1) the decision-context (i.e., the suitability of using absolute performance or regret), (2) the decision-maker's preferred level of risk aversion, and (3) the decision-maker's preference toward maximizing performance, minimizing variance, or some higher-order moment. This article also introduces a conceptual framework describing when relative robustness values of decision alternatives obtained using different metrics are likely to agree and disagree. This is used as a measure of how ?stable? the ranking of decision alternatives is when determined using different robustness metrics. The framework is tested on three case studies, including water supply augmentation in Adelaide, Australia, the operation of a multipurpose regulated lake in Italy, and flood protection for a hypothetical river based on a reach of the river Rhine in the Netherlands. The proposed conceptual framework is confirmed by the case study results, providing insight into the reasons for disagreements between rankings obtained using different robustness metrics.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for mcphail_robustness:2019:
% ? unused Library catalog ("agupubs-onlinelibrary-wiley-com.ezproxy.cul.columbia.edu (Atypon)")
% ? unused Short title ("robustness")
@article{oddo_coastal:2017,
title = {Deep Uncertainties in Sea-Level Rise and Storm Surge Projections: Implications for Coastal Flood Risk Management},
author = {Oddo, Perry C. and Lee, Ben S. and Garner, Gregory G. and Srikrishnan, Vivek and Reed, Patrick M. and Forest, Chris E. and Keller, Klaus},
date = {2017},
journaltitle = {Risk Analysis},
volume = {0},
number = {0},
issn = {1539-6924},
doi = {10/ghkp82},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.12888},
urldate = {2019-09-11},
abstract = {Sea levels are rising in many areas around the world, posing risks to coastal communities and infrastructures. Strategies for managing these flood risks present decision challenges that require a combination of geophysical, economic, and infrastructure models. Previous studies have broken important new ground on the considerable tensions between the costs of upgrading infrastructure and the damages that could result from extreme flood events. However, many risk-based adaptation strategies remain silent on certain potentially important uncertainties, as well as the tradeoffs between competing objectives. Here, we implement and improve on a classic decision-analytical model (Van Dantzig 1956) to: (i) capture tradeoffs across conflicting stakeholder objectives, (ii) demonstrate the consequences of structural uncertainties in the sea-level rise and storm surge models, and (iii) identify the parametric uncertainties that most strongly influence each objective using global sensitivity analysis. We find that the flood adaptation model produces potentially myopic solutions when formulated using traditional mean-centric decision theory. Moving from a single-objective problem formulation to one with multiobjective tradeoffs dramatically expands the decision space, and highlights the need for compromise solutions to address stakeholder preferences. We find deep structural uncertainties that have large effects on the model outcome, with the storm surge parameters accounting for the greatest impacts. Global sensitivity analysis effectively identifies important parameter interactions that local methods overlook, and that could have critical implications for flood adaptation strategies.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for oddo_coastal:2017:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Wiley Online Library")
% ? unused Short title ("coastal")
@article{oreskes_verification:1994,
title = {Verification, Validation, and Confirmation of Numerical Models in the {{Earth}} Sciences},
author = {Oreskes, Naomi and Shrader-Frechette, Kristin and Belitz, Kenneth},
date = {1994-02-04},
journaltitle = {Science},
publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science},
doi = {10.1126/science.263.5147.641},
url = {http://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/science.263.5147.641},
urldate = {2021-09-02},
abstract = {Verification and validation of numerical models of natural systems is impossible. This is because natural systems are never closed and because model results are always nonunique. Models can be confirmed by the demonstration of agreement between ...}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for oreskes_verification:1994:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? unused Archive location ("world")
% ? unused Language ("EN")
% ? unused Library catalog ("www-science-org.ezproxy.rice.edu")
% ? unused Short title ("verification")
@report{pbl_waterchallenges:2019,
title = {The Geography of Future Water Challenges},
author = {{PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency}},
date = {2019},
institution = {PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency},
location = {The Hague},
url = {https://www.pbl.nl/en/publications/the-geography-of-future-water-challenges},
shortauthor = {PBL Netherlands}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for pbl_waterchallenges:2019:
% Missing required field 'type'
% ? unused Short title ("water challenges")
@online{pollack_equity:2023,
title = {Transparency on Underlying Values Is Needed for Useful Equity Measurements},
author = {Pollack, Adam and Helgeson, Casey and Kousky, Carolyn and Keller, Klaus},
date = {2023-09-15},
eprinttype = {OSF Preprints},
doi = {10.31219/osf.io/kvyxr},
url = {https://osf.io/kvyxr/},
urldate = {2023-11-22},
abstract = {Decision-makers increasingly invoke equity to motivate, design, implement, and evaluate strategies for managing flood risks. But there is no objective definition of equity. This pluralistic setting calls for transparency about underlying values, but this practice is uncommon. Here, we review how equity is measured by surveying peer-reviewed publications that explicitly state an interest in equity in the context of flood-risk management. We develop a simple taxonomy for how transparent measurements can be defined. We map reviewed measurements to this taxonomy. Finally, we offer guidance on how the pursuit of a clear and consistent quantitative evidence base about equity can become more widespread in flood-risk research and beyond.},
pubstate = {preprint}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for pollack_equity:2023:
% ? unused Language ("en-us")
% ? unused Short title ("equity")
@article{quinn_dps:2017,
title = {Direct Policy Search for Robust Multi-Objective Management of Deeply Uncertain Socio-Ecological Tipping Points},
author = {Quinn, Julianne D. and Reed, Patrick M. and Keller, Klaus},
date = {2017-06-01},
journaltitle = {Environmental Modelling \& Software},
shortjournal = {Environmental Modelling \& Software},
volume = {92},
pages = {125--141},
issn = {1364-8152},
doi = {10.1016/j.envsoft.2017.02.017},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364815216302250},
urldate = {2019-09-27},
abstract = {Managing socio-ecological systems is a challenge wrought by competing societal objectives, deep uncertainties, and potentially irreversible tipping points. A classic, didactic example is the shallow lake problem in which a hypothetical town situated on a lake must develop pollution control strategies to maximize its economic benefits while minimizing the probability of the lake crossing a critical phosphorus (P) threshold, above which it irreversibly transitions into a eutrophic state. Here, we explore the use of direct policy search (DPS) to design robust pollution control rules for the town that account for deeply uncertain system characteristics and conflicting objectives. The closed loop control formulation of DPS improves the quality and robustness of key management tradeoffs, while dramatically reducing the computational complexity of solving the multi-objective pollution control problem relative to open loop control strategies. These insights suggest DPS is a promising tool for managing socio-ecological systems with deeply uncertain tipping points.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for quinn_dps:2017:
% ? unused Library catalog ("ScienceDirect")
% ? unused Short title ("dps")
@article{reed_multiobjective:2013,
title = {Evolutionary Multiobjective Optimization in Water Resources: {{The}} Past, Present, and Future},
author = {Reed, P. M. and Hadka, D. and Herman, J. D. and Kasprzyk, J. R. and Kollat, J. B.},
date = {2013-01-01},
journaltitle = {Advances in Water Resources},
shortjournal = {Advances in Water Resources},
series = {35th {{Year Anniversary Issue}}},
volume = {51},
pages = {438--456},
issn = {0309-1708},
doi = {10.1016/j.advwatres.2012.01.005},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0309170812000073},
urldate = {2019-03-12},
abstract = {This study contributes a rigorous diagnostic assessment of state-of-the-art multiobjective evolutionary algorithms (MOEAs) and highlights key advances that the water resources field can exploit to better discover the critical tradeoffs constraining our systems. This study provides the most comprehensive diagnostic assessment of MOEAs for water resources to date, exploiting more than 100,000 MOEA runs and trillions of design evaluations. The diagnostic assessment measures the effectiveness, efficiency, reliability, and controllability of ten benchmark MOEAs for a representative suite of water resources applications addressing rainfall–runoff calibration, long-term groundwater monitoring (LTM), and risk-based water supply portfolio planning. The suite of problems encompasses a range of challenging problem properties including (1) many-objective formulations with four or more objectives, (2) multi-modality (or false optima), (3) nonlinearity, (4) discreteness, (5) severe constraints, (6) stochastic objectives, and (7) non-separability (also called epistasis). The applications are representative of the dominant problem classes that have shaped the history of MOEAs in water resources and that will be dominant foci in the future. Recommendations are given for the new algorithms that should serve as the benchmarks for innovations in the water resources literature. The future of MOEAs in water resources needs to emphasize self-adaptive search, new technologies for visualizing tradeoffs, and the next generation of computing technologies.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for reed_multiobjective:2013:
% ? unused Library catalog ("ScienceDirect")
% ? unused Short title ("multiobjective")
@article{reed_multisectordynamics:2022,
title = {Multisector {{Dynamics}}: {{Advancing}} the {{Science}} of {{Complex Adaptive Human-Earth Systems}}},
author = {Reed, Patrick M. and Hadjimichael, Antonia and Moss, Richard H. and Brelsford, Christa and Burleyson, Casey D. and Cohen, Stuart and Dyreson, Ana and Gold, David F. and Gupta, Rohini S. and Keller, Klaus and Konar, Megan and Monier, Erwan and Morris, Jennifer and Srikrishnan, Vivek and Voisin, Nathalie and Yoon, Jim},
date = {2022},
journaltitle = {Earth's Future},
volume = {10},
number = {3},
pages = {e2021EF002621},
issn = {2328-4277},
doi = {10.1029/2021EF002621},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2021EF002621},
urldate = {2022-03-03},
abstract = {The field of MultiSector Dynamics (MSD) explores the dynamics and co-evolutionary pathways of human and Earth systems with a focus on critical goods, services, and amenities delivered to people through interdependent sectors. This commentary lays out core definitions and concepts, identifies MSD science questions in the context of the current state of knowledge, and describes ongoing activities to expand capacities for open science, leverage revolutions in data and computing, and grow and diversify the MSD workforce. Central to our vision is the ambition of advancing the next generation of complex adaptive human-Earth systems science to better address interconnected risks, increase resilience, and improve sustainability. This will require convergent research and the integration of ideas and methods from multiple disciplines. Understanding the tradeoffs, synergies, and complexities that exist in coupled human-Earth systems is particularly important in the context of energy transitions and increased future shocks.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for reed_multisectordynamics:2022:
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused extra: _eprint ("https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2021EF002621")
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Wiley Online Library")
% ? unused Short title ("Multisector Dynamics")
@article{satija_boomtown:2016,
entrysubtype = {newspaper},
title = {Boomtown, Flood Town},
author = {Satija, Nina and Collier, Kiah and Shaw, Al},
date = {2016-12-07},
journaltitle = {ProPublica},
location = {Houston, TX},
url = {https://projects.propublica.org/houston-cypress/},
urldate = {2021-05-31},
abstract = {Climate change will bring more frequent and fierce rainstorms to cities like Houston. But unchecked development remains a priority in the famously un-zoned city, creating short-term economic gains for some while increasing flood risks for everyone.},
journalsubtitle = {Hell and High Water}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for satija_boomtown:2016:
% Unexpected field 'location'
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Short title ("boomtown")
@book{savage:1954,
title = {Foundations of Statistics.},
author = {Savage, L.J.},
date = {1954},
publisher = {Wiley},
location = {New York}
}
@article{schneider_scenarios:2002,
title = {Can We Estimate the Likelihood of Climatic Changes at 2100?},
author = {Schneider, Stephen H.},
date = {2002-03},
journaltitle = {Climatic Change},
volume = {52},
number = {4},
pages = {441--451},
publisher = {Springer Nature B.V.},
location = {Dordrecht, Netherlands},
issn = {01650009},
doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1014276210717},
url = {https://www.proquest.com/docview/198493931/abstract/7F4C45C74324C3EPQ/1},
urldate = {2021-10-26},
abstract = {Schneider points out some of the consequences of the deliberate choice not to discuss the possibilities of CO2 emissions and how that can--and has--led to confusion on the part of the media and policy makers over the likelihood of potential dangerous anthropogenic climate change in the next century.},
pagetotal = {441-451}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for schneider_scenarios:2002:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% Unexpected field 'location'
% Unexpected field 'pagetotal'
% ? unused Language ("English")
% ? unused Library catalog ("ProQuest")
% ? unused Short title ("scenarios")
@article{schwetschenau_optimizing:2023,
title = {Optimizing {{Scale}} for {{Decentralized Wastewater Treatment}}: {{A Tool}} to {{Address Failing Wastewater Infrastructure}} in the {{United States}}},
author = {Schwetschenau, Sara E. and Kovankaya, Yunus and Elliott, Mark A. and Allaire, Maura and White, Kevin D. and Lall, Upmanu},
date = {2023-01-13},
journaltitle = {ACS ES\&T Engineering},
shortjournal = {ACS EST Eng.},
volume = {3},
number = {1},
pages = {1--14},
publisher = {American Chemical Society},
doi = {10.1021/acsestengg.2c00188},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1021/acsestengg.2c00188},
urldate = {2023-09-19},
abstract = {Wastewater systems (sewered or on-site septic tanks) are failing across the U.S. Economically disadvantaged populations, communities of color, tribal lands, and rural/peri-urban areas are especially vulnerable. Efficient deployment of public and private capital to assure appropriate service levels and affordability is a critical need. We present a modeling framework to identify economically optimal wastewater network layout and component sizes. Six system configurations are considered, which include gravity versus pressurized collection system flow and treatment of septic effluent versus raw wastewater. A case study for Uniontown, Alabama─a community that has been in national news for the failure of their wastewater infrastructure─is presented. We find that a decentralized network that separates and stores solids on-site, prior to conveyance to a cluster-scale treatment site, has a fraction of the capital and operating cost of a centralized system that is currently proposed. Broader implications are discussed.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for schwetschenau_optimizing:2023:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused Library catalog ("ACS Publications")
% ? unused Short title ("optimizing")
@incollection{seneviratne_wg1ch11:2021,
type = {Book section},
title = {Weather and Climate Extreme Events in a Changing Climate},
booktitle = {Climate Change 2021: {{The}} Physical Science Basis. {{Contribution}} of Working Group {{I}} to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change},
author = {Seneviratne, S.I. and Zhang, X. and Adnan, M. and Badi, W. and Dereczynski, C. and Di Luca, A. and Ghosh, S. and Iskandar, I. and Kossin, J. and Lewis, S. and Otto, F. and Pinto, I. and Satoh, M. and Vicente-Serrano, S.M. and Wehner, M. and Zhou, B.},
editor = {Masson-Delmotte, V. and Zhai, P. and Pirani, A. and Connors, S. L. and Péan, C. and Berger, S. and Caud, N. and Chen, Y. and Goldfarb, L. and Gomis, M. I. and Huang, M. and Leitzell, K. and Lonnoy, E. and Matthews, J. B. R. and Maycock, T. K. and Waterfield, T. and Yelekçi, O. and Yu, R. and Zhou, B.},
date = {2021},
publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
location = {Cambridge, UK and New York, NY, USA},
doi = {10.1017/9781009157896.013},
url = {https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/downloads/report/IPCC_AR6_WGI_Chapter11.pdf}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for seneviratne_wg1ch11:2021:
% Unexpected field 'type'
% ? unused Section ("11")
% ? unused Short title ("WG1 Ch11")
@article{smith_pareto:2022,
title = {Multiobjective Optimization and {{Pareto}} Front Visualization Techniques Applied to Normal Conducting Rf Accelerating Structures},
author = {Smith, S. and Southerby, M. and Setiniyaz, S. and Apsimon, R. and Burt, G.},
date = {2022-06-14},
journaltitle = {Physical Review Accelerators and Beams},
shortjournal = {Phys. Rev. Accel. Beams},
volume = {25},
number = {6},
pages = {062002},
publisher = {American Physical Society},
doi = {10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.25.062002},
url = {https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.25.062002},
urldate = {2024-02-26},
abstract = {There has been a renewed interest in applying multiobjective (MO) optimization methods to a number of problems in the physical sciences, including to rf structure design. The results of these optimizations generate large datasets, which makes visualizing the data and selecting individual solutions difficult. Using the generated results, Pareto fronts can be found giving the trade-off between different objectives, allowing one to utilize this key information in design decisions. Although various visualization techniques exist, it can be difficult to know which technique is appropriate and how to apply them successfully to the problem at hand. First, we present the setup and execution of MO optimizations of one standing wave and one traveling wave accelerating cavity, including constraint handling and an algorithm comparison. In order to understand the generated Pareto frontiers, we discuss several visualization techniques, applying them to the problem, and give the benefits and drawbacks of each. We found that the best techniques involve clustering the resulting data first to narrow down the possible choices and then using multidimensional visualization methods such as parallel coordinate plots and decision maps to view the clustered results and select individual solutions. Finally, we give some examples of the application of these methods and the cavities selected based on arbitrary design requirements.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for smith_pareto:2022:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? unused Library catalog ("APS")
% ? unused Short title ("pareto")
@article{sommer_rainfall:2022,
entrysubtype = {newspaper},
title = {An Unexpected Item Is Blocking Cities' Climate Change Prep: Obsolete Rainfall Records},
author = {Sommer, Lauren},
date = {2022-02-09},
journaltitle = {NPR},
url = {https://www.npr.org/2022/02/09/1078261183/an-unexpected-item-is-blocking-cities-climate-change-prep-obsolete-rainfall-reco},
urldate = {2024-01-05},
abstract = {Cities are experiencing heavier storms and flooding as the climate gets hotter. But due to outdated rainfall records, many are still building infrastructure for the climate of the past.},
journalsubtitle = {Climate}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for sommer_rainfall:2022:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Short title ("rainfall")
@article{steinschneider_expanded:2015,
ids = {Steinschneider:2015kk},
title = {Expanded Decision-Scaling Framework to Select Robust Long-Term Water-System Plans under Hydroclimatic Uncertainties},
author = {Steinschneider, Scott and McCrary, Rachel and Wi, Sungwook and Mulligan, Kevin and Mearns, Linda O and Brown, Casey M},
date = {2015-11},
journaltitle = {Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management},
volume = {141},
number = {11},
doi = {10.1061/(asce)wr.1943-5452.0000536},
url = {http://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/%28ASCE%29WR.1943-5452.0000536}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for steinschneider_expanded:2015:
% ? unused Language ("English")
% ? unused Short title ("expanded")
@book{sutton_reinforcement:2018,
title = {Reinforcement Learning: An {{Introduction}}},
author = {Sutton, Richard S and Barto, Andrew G},
date = {2018},
edition = {Second Edition},
publisher = {MIT Press},
location = {Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England},
isbn = {0-262-03924-9}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for sutton_reinforcement:2018:
% ? unused Short title ("reinforcement")
@report{sweet_slr:2022,
type = {NOAA Technical Report},
title = {Global and Regional Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the {{United States}}},
author = {Sweet, W.V. and Hamlington, B.D. and Kopp, R.E. and Weaver, C.P. and Barnard, P.L. and Bekaert, D. and Brooks, W. and Craghan, M. and Dusek, G.},
date = {2022},
number = {NOS 01},
pages = {111},
institution = {{National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Ocean Service}},
location = {Silver Spring, MD},
url = {https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/hazards/sealevelrise/sealevelrise-tech-report-sections.html}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for sweet_slr:2022:
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Zotero")
% ? unused Short title ("slr")
@article{tedesco_exposure:2020,
title = {Exposure of Real Estate Properties to the 2018 {{Hurricane Florence}} Flooding},
author = {Tedesco, Marco and McAlpine, Steven and Porter, Jeremy R.},
date = {2020-04-01},
journaltitle = {Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences},
volume = {20},
number = {3},
pages = {907--920},
publisher = {Copernicus GmbH},
issn = {1561-8633},
doi = {10.5194/nhess-20-907-2020},
url = {https://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/20/907/2020/},
urldate = {2020-04-11},
abstract = {Quantifying the potential exposure of property to damages associated with storm surges, extreme weather and hurricanes is fundamental to developing frameworks that can be used to conceive and implement mitigation plans as well as support urban development that accounts for such events. In this study, we aim at quantifying the total value and area of properties exposed to the flooding associated with Hurricane Florence that occurred in September 2018. To this aim, we implement an approach for the identification of affected areas by generating a map of the maximum flood extent obtained from a combination of the flood extent produced by the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA's) water marks with those obtained from spaceborne radar remote-sensing data. The use of radar in the creation of the flood extent allows for those properties commonly missed by FEMA's interpolation methods, especially from pluvial or non-fluvial sources, and can be used in more accurately estimating the exposure and market value of properties to event-specific flooding. Lastly, we study and quantify how the urban development over the past decades in the regions flooded by Hurricane Florence might have impacted the exposure of properties to present-day storms and floods. This approach is conceptually similar to what experts are addressing as the “expanding bull's eye effect”, in which “targets” of geophysical hazards, such as people and their built environments, enlarge as populations grow and spread. Our results indicate that the total value of property exposed to flooding during Hurricane Florence was USD\ 52 billion (in 2018 USD), with this value increasing from USD\ ∼10 billion at the beginning of the past century to the final amount based on the expansion of the number of properties exposed. We also found that, despite the decrease in the number of properties built during the decade before Florence, much of the new construction was in proximity to permanent water bodies, hence increasing exposure to flooding. Ultimately, the results of this paper provide a new tool for shedding light on the relationships between urban development in coastal areas and the flooding of those areas, which is estimated to increase in view of projected increasing sea level rise, storm surges and the strength of storms.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for tedesco_exposure:2020:
% Unexpected field 'publisher'
% ? unused Language ("English")
% ? unused Library catalog ("www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net")
% ? unused Short title ("exposure")
@article{thomson_systemic:2023,
ids = {thomson_:2022,thomson_financial:2021},
title = {Systemic {{Financial Risk Arising From Residential Flood Losses}}},
author = {Thomson, Hope and Zeff, Harrison B. and Kleiman, Rachel and Sebastian, Antonia and Characklis, Gregory W.},
date = {2023},
journaltitle = {Earth's Future},
volume = {11},
number = {4},
pages = {e2022EF003206},
issn = {2328-4277},
doi = {10.1029/2022EF003206},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2022EF003206},
urldate = {2023-07-07},
abstract = {Direct damage from flooding at residential properties has typically been categorized as insured, with liabilities accruing to insurers, or uninsured, with costs accruing to property owners. However, residential flooding can also expose lenders and local governments to financial risk, though the distribution of this risk is not well understood. Flood losses are not limited to direct damages, but also include indirect effects such as decreases in property values, which can be substantial, though are rarely well quantified. The combination of direct damage and property value decrease influences rates of mortgage default and property abandonment in the wake of a flood, creating financial risk. In this research, property-level data on sales, mortgages, and insurance claims are used in combination with machine learning techniques and geostatistical methods to provide estimates of flood losses that are then utilized to evaluate the risk of default and abandonment in eastern North Carolina following Hurricane Florence (2018). Within the study area, Hurricane Florence generated \textbackslash 366M in observed insured damages and an estimated \textbackslash 1.77B in combined uninsured damages and property value decreases. Property owners, lenders, and local governments were exposed to an additional \$562M in potential losses due to increased rates of default and abandonment. Areas with lower pre-flood property values were exposed to greater risk than areas with higher valued properties. Results suggest more highly resolved estimates of a flooding event's systemic financial risk may be useful in developing improved flood resilience strategies.}
}
% == BibLateX quality report for thomson_systemic:2023:
% ? Title looks like it was stored in title-case in Zotero
% ? unused extra: _eprint ("https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2022EF003206")
% ? unused Language ("en")
% ? unused Library catalog ("Wiley Online Library")
% ? unused Short title ("systemic")