Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/129882
Title: High-resolution modelling of island exposure to natural hazards tested with real disasters
Authors: Ferrer Valero, Nicolás 
Herrera, Gustavo
UNESCO Clasification: 54 Geografía
250621 Vulcanología
5403 Geografía humana
Keywords: Natural risks
Human exposure
Dasymetric downscaling
Oceanic islands
Canary islands
Issue Date: 2024
Journal: Applied Geography 
Abstract: Oceanic islands are multi-risk territories but statistical aggregation of socio-economic exposure data is often a constraint for high-resolution risk modelling and hazard prevention. This work presents a downscaling procedure to obtain a complete high-resolution cartographic base on the distribution of main socio-economic variables in the Canary Islands (Spain). For this purpose, a new dasymetric procedure has been developed based on the combination of cadastral censuses, detailed planimetries and LiDAR altimetry data. The methodology allowed for the construction of an exposure cartographic base (ECB) that comprises population, capital stock, productivity and heritage (cultural and natural) layers, covering the entire archipelago at 2.5 m resolution. The ECB results was tested for accuracy and found to be 90% accurate within a positional range of 50 m. The ECB was then compared with real damages in three recent natural disasters: a volcanic eruption on La Palma in 2021, a wildfire in Gran Canaria in 2019 and a coastal flooding in Tenerife in 2018. The comparison between modelled exposure and actual damage revealed the consistency of the cartographic base for full-damage events and the need to incorporate the vulnerability factor to obtain a more accurate estimate for partial damage events.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/129882
ISSN: 0143-6228
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2024.103239
Source: Applied Geography [ISSN 0143-6228], v. 165, 103239, (Febrero 2024)
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