A data paper is out in WWR

One data paper reporting the global extreme climate events and their economic impacts is out in Water Resources Research. This paper was a product when the EMAIL lab was in UTEP (started in June 2015).

A comprehensive data set of extreme hydrological events (EHEs)—floods and droughts, consisting of 2,171 occurrences worldwide, during 1960‐2014 was compiled, and then their economic losses were normalized using a price index in U.S. dollar. The data set showed a significant increasing trend of EHEs before 2000, while a slight post‐2000 decline. Correspondingly, the EHE‐caused economic losses increased obviously before 2000 followed by a slight decrease; the post‐2000 decline could be partially attributed to the decreases in drought and flood‐prone area or climate adaptation practices. Spatially, Asia experienced most EHEs (969), corresponding to the largest share of economic losses (approximately $868 billion for floods and $50 billion for droughts, respectively), while Oceania had the least EHEs (102) and the least economic losses (approximately $19 billion for floods and $45 billion for droughts). The five countries with the highest EHE‐caused economic losses were China, United States, Canada, Australia, and India. Countries that suffered the highest flood‐caused economic losses were China, United States, and Canada. This data set provides a quantitative linkage between climate science and economic losses at a global scale, and it is beneficial for the regional climatic impact assessments and strategical development for mitigating climate change impacts.

 

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2019WR025135

 
 
 

About the author

My research mainly focuses on land-atmosphere interaction in a framework of Earth system modeling. I am currently working on evaluating soil microbial mechanisms on production and consumption of trace gases and their roles in climate system dynamics. I have published numerous papers in prestigious journals including Ecology Letters, Global Change Biology, Global Biogeochemical Cycle, Global Ecology and Biogeography, Environmental Science and Technology, Biogeosciences, Journal of Geophysical Research, and Environmental Research Letter, etc. I also serve as an associate editor for Global Ecology and Biogeography and on editorial board for Agricultural and Forestry Meteorology and as an expert review for the 2013 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change wetland supplement as well as an ad hoc reviewer for more than twenty international journals and a few funding agencies.

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