Facing climate change and improving emergency responses in South America by analyzing urban cyclonic wind events
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pérez Arévalo, Raúl; Serrano Montes, José Luis; Rodrigo Comino, Jesús; Caballero Calvo, AndrésEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Urban quality life Climate change Urban management Natural hazards, tropical dry climate Natural hazards
Fecha
2023-03-28Referencia bibliográfica
PÉREZ-ARÉVALO, R... [et al.] (2023). Facing climate change and improving emergency responses in South America by analyzing urban cyclonic wind events. Urban Climate, 49 101489. ISSN: 2212-0955. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.uclim.2023.101489]
Patrocinador
Universidad de Granada / CBUAResumen
Climate change is modifying the spatiotemporal patterns of global precipitation events, temperatures,
and winds, therefore, after extreme events, improving emergency responses in urban areas
is key to saving its inhabitants. In Southern America, the number of extreme events is increasing.
This is the case of Soledad, the municipality in Colombia where most of the catastrophic wind
phenomena take place. To date, no studies have been conducted to quantify the impacts and
effects of the urban cyclonic wind phenomena on society and the urban built environment. This
lack of information and dissemination means that the population is not informed of the magnitude
of the problem. This research aims to generate a risk map of atmospheric wind phenomena to
evaluate their impacts and establish spatial-temporal correlations based on meteorological data
from the last 20 years. Moreover, the online press has been used to identify the location of these
phenomena and their negative impacts over time. For each event, the following indicators have
been studied: (1) location of the atmospheric wind events; (2) occurrence rate; (3) impact of the
events discriminated by fatalities, injuries, and affected houses. The results show that in 20 years,
a total of 34 urban cyclonic wind events were reported. Those occurrences have impacted 60
neighbourhoods, leaving 7 deaths, 14,552 injured, and 5180 affected homes. These findings show
the magnitude of the problem and the need to inform the population to improve emergency responses.
We conclude that effective consideration of the resulting map will be crucial in the
processes of decision-making related to territorial planning in Soledad, but also in other Southern
American cities.