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15 - Nonstructural Mitigation of Flood Hazards

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

Eve Gruntfest
Affiliation:
Department of Geography and Environmental Studies University of Colorado
Ellen E. Wohl
Affiliation:
Colorado State University
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Summary

Introduction

Extent of Flood Vulnerability – Advantages of Floodplain Occupation

Rivers play a critical role in world history. They allow cities to develop. They serve as major transportation routes linking inland regions with the seas. River floodplains provide some of the most productive farmland. They serve as significant ecological systems and offer recreation opportunities.

Riverine floods are extremely expensive in terms of lost lives and lost property. However, floods also have benefits. They carry deposits of fertile alluvium. Floodplains have supported settlements along the Euphrates, Ganges, Indus, Nile, Tigris, and Yangtse Rivers for thousands of years (Alexander, 1993). Floodplain communities support river transport and support activities dependent on the river including fishing, barge traffic, and power-generating stations. They also have scenic value.

Goals for floodplain management can be conflicting. The flood loss reduction goal may contradict goals of real estate and industrial development or increased agricultural production. Floodplains are not always well managed. In the United States, although only about 7% of the country's total land area lies in floodplains, over 7 million structures and billions of dollars worth of community facilities and private property are vulnerable to floods (Owen, 1981).

In 1955, U.S. floodplains had 10 million occupants. Thirty years later the number doubled to 20 million, and by the mid-1990s about 12% of the national population lived in areas of periodic inundation.

Type
Chapter
Information
Inland Flood Hazards
Human, Riparian, and Aquatic Communities
, pp. 394 - 410
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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