Optimisation of the UK’s flood defence infrastructure through the use of innovative statistical research on extreme values
Submitting Institution
Lancaster UniversityUnit of Assessment
Mathematical SciencesSummary Impact Type
EnvironmentalResearch Subject Area(s)
Mathematical Sciences: Statistics
Economics: Econometrics
Summary of the impact
The UK spends £400-500M per year on flood defence infrastructure with 2
million properties exposed to the risk of flooding. Lancaster's research
on extreme value methods is fundamental to optimising the design of this
infrastructure to protect against coastal and river extreme events. This
optimisation minimises costs without jeopardising the level of accepted
risk and hence has financial and societal benefits. These methods are the
fundamental component in:
- The design of all UK's coastal flood defences, total spend of £900M on
900 schemes over the REF census period.
- Saving the UK government £6M over this period from consultant fees.
- International governments' and the insurance industry's assessment of
widespread river flooding risk.
Underpinning research
Overview of Research
Estimating the frequency of events that are more extreme than any
previous observation is a key element in environmental risk prevention and
assessment. Extreme value theory, a core research area at Lancaster for 20
years, provides mathematically justified models as the basis for
extrapolations from observed large events out to more extreme events. The
underpinning research at Lancaster for flooding comprises univariate,
multivariate and spatial extreme value analysis and consists of two papers
in the prestigious RSS discussion paper series as well as a series of
papers in the journal Applied Statistics. Bortot, Coles, Dixon, Heffernan,
Keef and Tawn were all based at Lancaster when the cited research was
undertaken. Our research provides novel statistical methodologies that
integrate knowledge of the structure of oceanographic and hydrological
processes with substantial developments in extreme value theory. Indirect
evidence of the importance of this research to the UK government is shown
by DEFRA and Environment Agency funding of £780K to support Lancaster's
research on extreme value methods and their application to assessing the
risk of flooding.
Coastal Flooding
For coastal flood defences the two key design parameters, in order of
importance, are still water level (sea level with waves averaged out) and
overtopping rate (a combination of wave characteristics and still water
level).
Still water level is the sum of two components: tide (deterministic) and
surge (stochastic). Dixon and Tawn developed the first extreme value
methods which accounted for any of the following features: the tide-surge
decomposition; interaction between the tide and surge; the spatial
coherence of the surge; the use of hydro-dynamical models that predict the
tides at intermediate sites; and inference using all extreme events (see
e.g. Dixon et al. 1998). These developments required novel theory for
temporal extremes and sophisticated covariate and spatial smoothing for
extremes. The outcome was the first set of systematic estimates of extreme
still water levels for the entire UK coastline that has no bias and much
smaller confidence intervals than previous methods. Tawn provided the
statistical expertise in a recent adaptation of these methods by Batstone
et al. (2013) that updated estimates by using the additional recent data
and instead of surge used a characteristic known as skew surge that
removed the need to model the tide-surge interaction.
For extremes of overtopping rate the joint distribution of still water
level, wave height, wave period and direction needs modelling in its
extreme tails. This involves univariate modelling of the tails but also
multivariate extreme value theory for the dependence structure. Coles and
Tawn (1994) identified the benefit of treating these approaches as
multivariate, developed a generic Poisson process approach and illustrated
its use in the overtopping problem. The methods were later tuned for
overtopping by Bortot et al. (2000) using simplified dependence models
that gave sufficient flexibility but were robust.
River Flooding and Risk Assessment
Until Heffernan and Tawn (2004) multivariate extreme value methods were
restricted to low dimensional cases with restricted forms of dependence
structure, with the methods relying on an underlying assumption of
multivariate regular variation. Heffernan and Tawn (2004) addressed the
problem from an orthogonal approach by looking at limit theory
conditionally on a component of the vector variable being extreme. This
opened the methodology to substantive application for high dimensional
analyses and a broad range of dependence structures. The work was extended
and tailored for application to river flooding in Keef et al. (2009),
addressing issues such as how to deal with missing data and temporal
dependence.
References to the research
Key references
Coles, S. G. and Tawn, J. A. (1994). Statistical methods for multivariate
extremes: an application to structural design (with discussion), Appl.
Statist., 43, 1-48.
Dixon, J. M., Tawn, J. A. and Vassie, J. M. (1998). Spatial modelling of
extreme sea-levels, Environmetrics, 9, 283--301.
Heffernan, J. E. and Tawn, J. A. (2004). A conditional approach to
modelling multivariate extreme values (with discussion), J. Roy. Statist.
Soc., B, 66, 497--547.
Other references
Batstone, C., Lawless, M., Tawn, J. A., Horsburgh, K., Blackman, D.
McMillan, A., Worth, D., Laeger, S., and Hunt, T. (2013). A UK
best-practice approach for extreme sea level analysis along complex
topographic coastlines. Ocean Engineering, 71, 28-39
Bortot, P, Coles, S. G. and Tawn, J. A. (2000). The multivariate Gaussian
tail model: an application to oceanographic data, Appl. Statist., 49,
31-49.
Keef, C., Tawn, J. A. and Svensson, C. (2009). Spatial risk assessment
for extreme river flows. Appl. Statist., 58, 601-618.
Details of the impact
Impact on Design of Coastal Flood Defences
The North Sea floods of 1953 claimed 307 lives in the UK and 1,800 in
Netherlands. Following that event more rigorous methods of data collection
and analysis were used in coastal flood defence design. Large budgets are
involved, e.g., the total spend on defences on the UK east coast in
Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex was £250M in 10 years. In
designing a sea-wall the key design factor is its height which needs to be
estimated to ensure an intended level of protection, which typically
corresponds to events larger than those already observed. If the wall is
built too high then substantial unnecessary costs can be incurred: 1m of
extra height on average costs £150K per 100m length of wall with the UK
having about 1000km of walls (JBA 2013). If it is too small then the
intended level of protection will not be achieved, with flooding occurring
at a greater frequency than anticipated and hence unacceptable risks to
human life/property and effects on longer-term property value. Therefore
major economic and societal benefits arise from optimising the wall
height.
Design standards for a typical coastal town are based on 100-year return
levels, which corresponds to the sea-wall height that would be exceeded on
average once in 100 years. Prior to the underpinning research for this
study, different methods had been used giving estimates for the 100-year
level return level at a site that varied by between 0.5-1m for each of the
30 sites with data and by much greater larger amounts at intermediate
sites without observations (Dixon and Tawn, 1997).
Using the new methods for inference for extreme still water levels
developed at Lancaster, Dixon and Tawn (1997) produced the first set of
estimates of still water extremes for the entire UK coastline. Following
strong recommendations from DEFRA and the Proudman Oceanographic
Laboratory (now the National Oceanography Centre) these values were used
in all designs of UK coastal flood defence designs from 1997 to 2010
(JBA, 2013). In 2008-10 Tawn provided the statistical expertise in a
consortium with JBA Consulting, the National Oceanography Centre and Royal
Haskoning to update the methods, exploit new data, and produce a new full
set of estimates for the Environment Agency that have been used
systematically by the Environment Agency and their clients since 2010
(Environment Agency, 2011, Batstone et al 2013). In particular, these
estimates have been used to determine the design of over 900 schemes,
total spend £900M (JBA 2013), over the REF census period.
Even when the still water level does not breach the sea-wall, substantial
flooding can occur due to overtopping by waves. Using the methods
described in Section 2 for dependence modelling, joint work with HR
Wallingford (Bortot and Tawn, 1998; Hawkes et al., 2002) led to the
software JOINSEA. This software "set the standard for joint probability
analysis in the UK flood risk studies, and probably remains the industry
standard for joint probability assessments in coastal assessments [...]
because it is practically the only method used." (HRW 2013). It has
been used throughout the REF census for determining the designs of all UK
coastal flood defences to reduce the wave overtopping to an acceptable
level. In 2010, Eastoe (at Lancaster) and Tawn with Royal Haskoning
produced for the Environment Agency joint distributions of wave
characteristics (wind-sea waves and swell waves) around the UK for more
systematic use.
Both the still water and wave estimates we produced are specified by the
Environment Agency (see e.g., Environment Agency, 2013; which refers to
these as Coastal Flood Boundary Data) as the key input into cost-benefit
analyses that have to be undertaken before any design for new flood
defences is approved. For still water level the estimates differ from
earlier values by 20-30 cm, which, if half are lower, corresponds to an
estimate of a saving of £22.5M on 450 schemes of 100m long.
Additionally the creation of these estimates saves the UK government
paying consultant fees for deriving these estimates separately for each
site (previously typically costing £15K per schemes, see JBA 2013) leading
to a saving since 2010 of over £6M (based on 450 of the 900 schemes
in the REF census being developed since 2010). Stefan Laeger (Research
Scientist at the Environment Agency), writes:
"The outputs from EA R&D project SC060064 `Coastal Flood Boundary
Conditions' produced a new, up-to-date national evidence base and
dataset on design sea level conditions for mainland UK. This dataset is
now the de facto industry standard in mainland UK and has been used to
inform the vast majority of new coastal work (defences, strategies, risk
maps etc) since summer 2011. Through Tawn's expert input, we were able
to ensure that this dataset was produced by using improved, more
scientifically robust statistical methods for analysing these extreme
conditions."
Impact on Risk Assessment of River Flooding
The risk of river flooding is managed by society through a combination of
governmental agencies and the insurance industry. For both these types of
organisation an estimate of the likelihood of the large or widespread
flooding events is essential. Such estimates are used by government to
help in coordinating flood mitigation activities and by the insurance
industry to assess the financial risk of claims associated with their
insurance portfolio. These demands call for spatial extreme value methods,
for which the only viable option is the novel method developed by
Heffernan and Tawn (2004) at Lancaster and described in Section 2. The
need for such tools is illustrated in the UK by large-scale floods in
2000-1 (£1B insurance loss), 2007 (£3B insurance loss with 55,000
properties flooded) and 2012 (£1B insurance loss).
The UKs two leading companies working on hydrological risk assessment,
JBA Consulting and HR Wallingford (combined annual turnover in excess of
£40M), have interfaced Lancaster's conditional spatial extremes
statistical work developed for rivers with hydrological models and housing
databases to produce tools to quantify the risks of spatial dependence in
flooding for the first time (e.g., JBA's portfolio analysis tool `JCALF' http://www.jbarisk.com/software,
Keef et al., 2013).
This software enables users to estimate accurately the distribution of
the annual total flood loss for their portfolio of insured properties.
This distribution is vital to the insurance companies in determining which
new properties to insure and for assessing how much reinsurance they
require to satisfy regulators. Without having an accurate model for the
joint distribution of different rivers flooding this loss distribution
cannot be accurately estimated and hence conservatism is applied in
estimates, resulting in substantial over-estimation of the amount of
reinsurance required. The key to this software is therefore the high
quality of the statistical model for multivariate extremes developed at
Lancaster and applied to extreme river levels jointly by research at
Lancaster and JBA Consulting,
An example of the use of this approach is that JBA Risk Management Ltd.
have developed such risk assessment products which have been licensed to
several major international clients operating in the catastrophe analysis
and reinsurance sector in the UK, France, Poland and India (JBA 2013).
Therefore there are substantial economic benefits from the research for
the insurance industry and consequently society.
Sources to corroborate the impact
Batstone, C., Lawless, M., Tawn, J. A., Horsburgh, K., Blackman, D.
McMillan, A., Worth, D., Laeger, S., and Hunt, T. (2013). A UK
best-practice approach for extreme sea level analysis along complex
topographic coastlines. Ocean Engineering, 71, 28-39
Bortot, P. and Tawn, J. A. (1998). Joint probability methods for extreme
still water levels and waves. HR Wallingford report, SR537, 234 pages.
Dixon, M. J. and Tawn, J. A. (1997). Spatial analyses for the UK,
Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory report, 112, 200 pages.
Environment Agency (2011). Coastal flood boundary conditions for UK
mainland and islands. Project: SC060064/TR2: Design sea-levels.
Environment Agency of England and Wales.
Environment Agency (2013). Outline brief for Cornwall Coastal Flood Risk
Modelling: Plymouth Sound and Tamar Estuary. Environment Agency.
Hawkes, P. J., Gouldby, B. P., Tawn, J. A. and Owen, M. W. (2002). The
joint probability of waves and water levels in coastal defence design. J.
Hydraulic Research, 40, 241--251.
Keef, C., Tawn, J. A. and Lamb, R. (2013). Estimating the probability of
widespread flood events. Environmetrics, 24, 13-21.
Letter of Support from Principal Engineer, HR Wallingford Ltd (HRW 2013)
Letter of Support from Chief Scientist, JBA Consulting (JBA 2013).
Letter of Support from Research Scientist, Environment Agency.