Growing consensus on climate and land use change means that it is reasonable to assume, at the very least, that flood levels in a region may change. Then why, ask Rosner et al. in a new study, do the dominant risk assessment techniques used to decide whether to build new flood protection infrastructure nearly always start with an assumption of “no trend” in flood behavior?

In an argument grounded in an analysis of the inherent limitations of statistical analyses, the authors suggest that researchers’ typical starting assumption that flood behavior is not changing—even in the face of suspected trends in extreme events and knowledge of how difficult such trends are to detect—causes water managers to undervalue flood protection benefits, opening the door to unnecessary losses down the line.

When researchers assume no trend, statistical errors could cause them to overlook the risks of underpreparing for changing flood conditions. Often, potential flood damage due to underpreparedness far exceeds the potential cost of overinvesting in flood protection infrastructure. Flipping the process, starting with an assumption that a change in flood conditions is occurring rather than only considering the risk of wasting money on unneeded infrastructure, would give critical attention to the risk of underestimating future floods.

The authors propose a method of risk assessment that starts with the null hypothesis of no trend but that explicitly assesses the effect of statistical uncertainties that may cause it to misidentify real trends and the damages those trends might produce. (Water Resources Research, doi:10.1002/​2013WR014561, 2014)

—Colin Schultz, Writer

© 2014. American Geophysical Union. All rights reserved.

© 2014. American Geophysical Union. All rights reserved.