Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact models

Impacts of extreme weather events are relevant for regional (in the sense of subnational) economies and in particular cities in many aspects. Cities are the cores of economic activity and the amount of people and assets endangered by extreme weather events is large, even under the current climate. A...

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Main Author: Malte Jahn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-12-01
Series:Weather and Climate Extremes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094715300141
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spelling doaj-8f451be090cc481080cd77d9441687012020-11-24T23:27:32ZengElsevierWeather and Climate Extremes2212-09472015-12-0110PB293910.1016/j.wace.2015.08.005Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact modelsMalte JahnImpacts of extreme weather events are relevant for regional (in the sense of subnational) economies and in particular cities in many aspects. Cities are the cores of economic activity and the amount of people and assets endangered by extreme weather events is large, even under the current climate. A changing climate with changing extreme weather patterns and the process of urbanization will make the whole issue even more relevant in the future. In this paper, definitions and terminology in the field of extreme weather events are discussed. Possible regional impacts of extreme weather events are collected, focusing on European cities. The human contributions to those impacts are emphasized. Furthermore, methodological aspects of economic impact assessment are discussed along a temporal and a sectoral dimension. Finally, common economic impact models are compared, analyzing their strengths and weaknesses.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094715300141Extreme weatherVulnerabilityDamageLossImpact assessmentClimate change
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Malte Jahn
spellingShingle Malte Jahn
Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact models
Weather and Climate Extremes
Extreme weather
Vulnerability
Damage
Loss
Impact assessment
Climate change
author_facet Malte Jahn
author_sort Malte Jahn
title Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact models
title_short Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact models
title_full Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact models
title_fullStr Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact models
title_full_unstemmed Economics of extreme weather events: Terminology and regional impact models
title_sort economics of extreme weather events: terminology and regional impact models
publisher Elsevier
series Weather and Climate Extremes
issn 2212-0947
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Impacts of extreme weather events are relevant for regional (in the sense of subnational) economies and in particular cities in many aspects. Cities are the cores of economic activity and the amount of people and assets endangered by extreme weather events is large, even under the current climate. A changing climate with changing extreme weather patterns and the process of urbanization will make the whole issue even more relevant in the future. In this paper, definitions and terminology in the field of extreme weather events are discussed. Possible regional impacts of extreme weather events are collected, focusing on European cities. The human contributions to those impacts are emphasized. Furthermore, methodological aspects of economic impact assessment are discussed along a temporal and a sectoral dimension. Finally, common economic impact models are compared, analyzing their strengths and weaknesses.
topic Extreme weather
Vulnerability
Damage
Loss
Impact assessment
Climate change
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094715300141
work_keys_str_mv AT maltejahn economicsofextremeweathereventsterminologyandregionalimpactmodels
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