Authors
Victoria L Boult, Emily Black, Halima Saado Abdillahi, Meghan Bailey, Clare Harris, Mary Kilavi, Dominic Kniveton, David MacLeod, Emmah Mwangi, George Otieno, Elizabeth Rees, Pedram Rowhani, Olivia Taylor, Martin C Todd
Publication date
2022/1/1
Journal
Climate Risk Management
Volume
35
Pages
100402
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The lives and livelihoods of people around the world are increasingly threatened by climate-related risks as climate change increases the frequency and severity of high-impact weather. In turn, the risk of multiple hazards occurring simultaneously grows and compound impacts become more likely. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) proposed the use of multi-hazard impact-based forecasting (IbF) to better anticipate and reduce the impacts of concurrent hazards, but as yet, there are few operational examples in the humanitarian sector.
Drought is particularly susceptible to multi-hazard influences. However, challenges encountered in the development of drought IbF systems – including poor understanding of compound impacts and specific hazard-focused mandates – raise important questions for the feasibility of multi-hazard IbF as envisioned by the WMO. With these challenges in mind, we propose an …
Total citations
2022202320241117
Scholar articles
VL Boult, E Black, HS Abdillahi, M Bailey, C Harris… - Climate Risk Management, 2022