Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010)
The term risk exposure combines the notions of natural hazard and the human exposure to that hazard. Spatial and temporal variations in risk exposure, therefore, can be caused by changes in hazard, in exposure, or both. In this work a novel methodology for computing and representing risk exposure a...
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Asociación Española de Geografía
2020-09-01
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doaj-aa7a2374d3694f17a998e84af7b960332021-10-11T09:19:56ZengAsociación Española de GeografíaBoletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles0212-94262605-33222020-09-018610.21138/bage.2949Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010)Roberto Serrano Notivoli0María Zúñiga-Antón1Ángel Pueyo2Santiago Beguería3Miguel Ángel Saz4Martín de Luis5Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)Universidad de ZaragozaUniversidad de ZaragozaConsejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)Universidad de ZaragozaUniversidad de Zaragoza The term risk exposure combines the notions of natural hazard and the human exposure to that hazard. Spatial and temporal variations in risk exposure, therefore, can be caused by changes in hazard, in exposure, or both. In this work a novel methodology for computing and representing risk exposure and its temporal changes are presented, and applied to the analysis of risk exposure to extreme rainfall in mainland Spain between 1950 and 2010. For that, two complementary high-resolution gridded datasets, one of population potentials and another one of precipitation concentration, are combined. Despite a great spatial variability over time, the highest exposure was consistently found in the surrounding areas of the largest cities and along the Mediterranean coast. The relative influence of population changes and precipitation concentration evolution is analyzed. Results suggest that hazard (precipitation concentration) changes led most of the observed changes in risk exposure, except in those decades where population movements were massive and widespread. https://bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/2949riskpopulationclimateprecipitationSpain |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Roberto Serrano Notivoli María Zúñiga-Antón Ángel Pueyo Santiago Beguería Miguel Ángel Saz Martín de Luis |
spellingShingle |
Roberto Serrano Notivoli María Zúñiga-Antón Ángel Pueyo Santiago Beguería Miguel Ángel Saz Martín de Luis Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010) Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles risk population climate precipitation Spain |
author_facet |
Roberto Serrano Notivoli María Zúñiga-Antón Ángel Pueyo Santiago Beguería Miguel Ángel Saz Martín de Luis |
author_sort |
Roberto Serrano Notivoli |
title |
Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010) |
title_short |
Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010) |
title_full |
Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010) |
title_fullStr |
Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland Spain (1950-2010) |
title_sort |
climate and population: risk exposure to precipitation concentration in mainland spain (1950-2010) |
publisher |
Asociación Española de Geografía |
series |
Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles |
issn |
0212-9426 2605-3322 |
publishDate |
2020-09-01 |
description |
The term risk exposure combines the notions of natural hazard and the human exposure to that hazard. Spatial and temporal variations in risk exposure, therefore, can be caused by changes in hazard, in exposure, or both. In this work a novel methodology for computing and representing risk exposure and its temporal changes are presented, and applied to the analysis of risk exposure to extreme rainfall in mainland Spain between 1950 and 2010. For that, two complementary high-resolution gridded datasets, one of population potentials and another one of precipitation concentration, are combined. Despite a great spatial variability over time, the highest exposure was consistently found in the surrounding areas of the largest cities and along the Mediterranean coast. The relative influence of population changes and precipitation concentration evolution is analyzed. Results suggest that hazard (precipitation concentration) changes led most of the observed changes in risk exposure, except in those decades where population movements were massive and widespread.
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topic |
risk population climate precipitation Spain |
url |
https://bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/2949 |
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1716827966094180352 |