Cyprien Bosserelle

and 9 more

Juliana Ungaro

and 6 more

Juliana Ungaro 1, Herve Damlamian 2, Sachindra Singh 2, Shaun Williams 3, Ryan Paulik 1, Rebecca Welsh 1, Litea Biukoto 2, Doug Ramsay 4 1. NIWA Taihoro Nukurangi, Private Bag 14901, Wellington 6241, Aotearoa New Zealand 2. Geoscience, Energy and Maritime Division, the Pacific Community (SPC), 241 Mead Road, Nabua, Fiji. 3. NIWA Taihoro Nukurangi, PO Box 8602, Christchurch 8440, Aotearoa New Zealand 4. NIWA Taihoro Nukurangi, PO Box 11115, Hillcrest, Hamilton, New Zealand The Pacific region is one of the most vulnerable and disaster-prone areas in the world. This issue is exacerbated by climate change, which is causing the frequency and intensity of climate related hazards to increase. Furthermore, increased urbanisation, population and environmental damage are all contributing to worsening risk levels. Hazard risk modelling tools can enable decision makers to better prepare for and respond to disasters, and to make sound economic and land-use planning decisions. The Pacific Risk Tool for Resilience, Phase 2 (PARTneR-2) is a three-year project that aims to build off the pilot PARTneR project to help Pacific Island Countries (PICs) become more resilient to the impacts of climate change and natural hazards through the effective use of robust information in decision-making. Currently, a critical gap across PICs is the availability and use of low-cost and easily applied tools to assist countries to make their own risk-informed decisions. By developing national risk models and assessment tools, PARTneR-2 will assist six PICs (the Cook Islands, Republic of Marshall Islands, Tuvalu, Tonga, Samoa and Vanuatu) to have the technical and institutional capability to use and apply these to make informed and effective decision-making related to weather, climate, and coastal hazards.

Mafutaga Leiofi

and 8 more

The Vaisigano River which flows through the Apia capital of Samoa is in a characteristic short and steep catchment conducive to rapid flash flooding following intense periods of antecedent rainfall. This results in short early warnings and emergency response lead times. Through the Government of Samoa’s Vaisigano Catchment Project (VCP) supported by the Green Climate Fund, technological initiatives to improve the forecasting of imminent flooding in the catchment which enables longer early warnings and response lead times were undertaken within a hazard risk context. In this talk we describe a pilot impacts-based flood monitoring, early warnings, and decision support system developed through the VCP and tailored for the Vaisigano River. The system comprises an integrative real-time automated framework involving the ingestion of numerical weather prediction rain intensity forecasts, real-time rainfall, river level and flow monitoring data, precomputed rainfall-runoff and predictive flood peak and magnitude tools, as well as estimates of flood inundation exposure and threat to safety at buildings and on roads for different return period events. Information is ingested into a centralized, web-based, flood decision support system (FDSS) portal that enables hydrometeorological officers to monitor, forecast and alert relevant emergency or humanitarian responders of imminent flooding with adequate lead time. The FDSS was tested in the lead up to the 18 December 2020 flooding in the Vaisigano and was able to alert duty officers of the estimated timing and magnitude of imminent channel-overtopping with up to 24 hours lead time. We discuss some of the key challenges and gaps to guide system improvements, as well as offer recommendations for future work.