When ENSO Reigns, It Pours: Climate Forecasts in Flood Planning

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Date

Oct. 31, 2001

Authors

Kris Wernstedt and Robert Hersh

Publication

Working Paper

Reading time

1 minute
Recent scientific and technical advances have increased the potential use of longterm seasonal climate forecasts for improving water resource management. This paper examines the role that forecasts, in particular those based on the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle, can play in flood planning in the Pacific Northwest. While strong evidence of an association between ENSO signals and flooding in the region exists, this association is open to more than one interpretation depending on: a) the metric used to test the strength of the association; b) the definition of critical flood events; c) site-specific features of watersheds; and d) the characteristics of flood management institutions. A better understanding and appreciation of such ambiguities, both institutional and statistical, is needed to facilitate the use of climate forecast information for flood planning and response.

Authors

Kris Wernstedt

Robert Hersh

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