Highlighting socioeconomic damages caused by weakened tropical cyclones in the Republic of Korea
Doo-Sun R. Park,
Chang-Hoi Ho (),
Jinwon Kim,
KiRyong Kang and
Chaehyeon C. Nam
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Doo-Sun R. Park: Seoul National University
Chang-Hoi Ho: Seoul National University
Jinwon Kim: University of California
KiRyong Kang: Korea Meteorological Administration
Chaehyeon C. Nam: Seoul National University
Natural Hazards: Journal of the International Society for the Prevention and Mitigation of Natural Hazards, 2016, vol. 82, issue 2, No 26, 1315 pages
Abstract:
Abstract To alleviate enormous socioeconomic damages by tropical cyclones (TCs), the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) retains a special warning system for strong TCs (STCs, maximum wind speed of the best-track data ≥17 m s−1), but not for relatively weak TCs (WTCs) which are not regarded as threatening as STCs; the warning system encompasses complex extreme phenomena such as gust, downpour, storm surge, and wind wave possibly arising from STCs. However, it is necessary to examine if WTCs can be actually as harmful as STCs with various extreme phenomena. Here, we compare the risks and intensities of WTCs with those of STCs for each province by analyzing the national damage reports and the near-surface wind and rainfall records from 60 weather stations in the Republic of Korea. According to our result, WTCs bring huge damages comparable to STCs in the northwestern Korea, the most populated and the richest area in the country, while WTCs cause much less destruction than STCs in the southeast. The large damages in the northwestern Korea can be explained by different mean landfall locations between WTCs and STCs; the storm centers of WTCs make landfall closer to the northwestern coastline than STCs’. Significant correlations between wind/rainfall and the damage amount by WTCs suggest that WTCs can also induce multiple extreme phenomena like STCs. Thus, the KMA needs to develop a special warning system for WTCs like for STCs.
Keywords: Tropical cyclone; Typhoon; Socioeconomic damage; Korea (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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DOI: 10.1007/s11069-016-2244-x
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