France
River floods
France: casualties in the past
At a national scale no clear trend of changing flood magnitudes have been found so far (35). A trend of decreasing flood magnitudes has been detected for southern France for the period 1920–1999 (36).
A study on extreme flood events over the last ca 270 years in the North-western European Alps showed that most of the extreme flood events in this period took place since the beginning of the 20th century, with the strongest occurring in 2005. The authors concluded that their results support the hypothesis of an increase of heavy rainfall events due to global warming, favouring the occurrence of high magnitude torrential flood events in high-altitude catchments (29). Generalised upward trends in flood magnitude in the northwest of France, downward trends in the southwest and mixed patterns in the centre have been found (32).
France: projections for the future
Projections of changes in flood hazard in France with climate change are subject to large uncertainties due to large natural variability and large uncertainties in the simulated climate signal from climate models (24).
European-scale simulations project an increase in extreme flow levels in the main French rivers by the end of the century. Recent national scale assessments (Seine River (25); Loire river (26)) mostly found little change in flooding in France with climate change, however.
Europe: casualties in the past
The annual number of reported flood disasters in Europe increased considerably in 1973-2002 (1). A disaster was defined here as causing the death of at least ten people, or affecting seriously at least 100 people, or requiring immediate emergency assistance. The total number of reported victims was 2626 during the whole period, the most deadly floods occurred in Spain in 1973 (272 victims), in Italy in 1998 (147 victims) and in Russia in 1993 (125 victims) (2).
Read moreEurope: flood losses in the past
The reported damages also increased. Three countries had damages in excess of €10 billion (Italy, Spain, Germany), three in excess of 5 billion (United Kingdom, Poland, France) (2).
Read moreEurope: flood frequency trends in the past
In 2012 the IPCC concluded that there is limited to medium evidence available to assess climate-driven observed changes in the magnitude and frequency of floods at a regional scale because the available instrumental records of floods at gauge stations are limited in space and time, and because of confounding effects of changes in land use and engineering. Furthermore, there is low agreement in this evidence, and thus overall low confidence at the global scale regarding even the sign of these changes. There is low confidence (due to limited evidence) that anthropogenic climate change has affected the magnitude or frequency of floods, though it has detectably influenced several components of the hydrological cycle such as precipitation and snowmelt (medium confidence to high confidence), which may impact flood trends (28).
Despite the considerable rise in the number of reported major flood events and economic losses caused by floods in Europe over recent decades, no significant general climate‑related trend in extreme high river flows that induce floods has yet been detected (7).
Read moreEurope: projections for the future
IPCC conclusions
In 2012 the IPCC concluded that considerable uncertainty remains in the projections of flood changes, especially regarding their magnitude and frequency. They concluded, therefore, that there is low confidence (due to limited evidence) in future changes in flood magnitude and frequency derived from river discharge simulations. Projected precipitation and temperature changes imply possible changes in floods, although overall there is low confidence in projections of changes in fluvial floods. Confidence is low due to limited evidence and because the causes of regional changes are complex, although there are exceptions to this statement. There is medium confidence (based on physical reasoning) that projected increases in heavy rainfall would contribute to increases in rain-generated local flooding, in some catchments or regions. Earlier spring peak flows in snowmelt- and glacier-fed rivers are very likely, but there is low confidence in their projected magnitude (28).
More frequent flash floods
Although there is as yet no proof that the extreme flood events of recent years are a direct consequence of climate change, they may give an indication of what can be expected: the frequency and intensity of floods in large parts of Europe is projected to increase (14). In particular, flash and urban floods, triggered by local intense precipitation events, are likely to be more frequent throughout Europe (15).
Read moreAdaptation strategies - General
Non-structural measures are in better agreement with the spirit of sustainable development than structural measures, being more reversible, commonly acceptable, and environment-friendly. Among such measures are source control (watershed/landscape structure management), laws and regulations (including zoning), economic instruments, an efficient flood forecast-warning system, a system of flood risk assessment, awareness raising, flood-related data bases, etc. As flood safety cannot be reached in most vulnerable areas with the help of structural means only, further flood risk reduction via non-structural measures is usually indispensable, and a site-specific mix of structural and non-structural measures seems to be a proper solution. As uncertainty in the assessment of climate change impacts is high, flexibility of adaptation strategies is particularly advantageous (23).
EU Directive on flood risk management
The new EU Directive on flood risk management, which entered into force in November 2006, introduces new instruments to manage risks from flooding, and is thus highly relevant in the context of adaptation to climate change impacts. The Directive introduces a three-step approach (2):
- Member States have to undertake a preliminary assessment of flood risk in river basins and coastal zones.
- Where significant risk is identified, flood hazard maps and flood risk maps have to be developed.
- Flood risk management plans must be developed for these zones. These plans have to include measures that will reduce the potential adverse consequences of flooding for human health, the environment cultural heritage and economic activity, and they should focus on prevention, protection and preparedness.
France
According to the national adaptation strategy of France, suitable responses need to be formulated in accordance with each catchment basin (within the framework of plans such as flood prevention action programmes and management plans for major rivers). In addition, adaptation of actions is needed to situations encountered (preparation of crisis management, prevision, awareness, protection devices, adaptation of the soil use regulations) (27).
Stricter application of existing regulation – e.g., the “Plan de Prévention des Risques d’Inondation” that ban new construction in flood-prone areas – could be a reasonable first step toward climate change adaptation. Including climate change information in new versions of these plans could even improve their efficiency, for instance by enlarging flood-prone areas where models project a large increase in extreme river flows (31).
Zoning policies can be used to limit the exposure to flooding of people and assets. Zoning regulations entail the determination of areas with a certain flood risk (i.e. the 100-year flood zone) and setting up certain land-use requirements for these zones. Such requirements could constitute, for instance, a complete ban, restricting certain uses, requiring certain building standards, giving recommendations and providing information to inhabitants in certain zones (33). In France and Switzerland, zoning policies include zones where developments are completely prohibited and zones where there are conditional uses or construction requirements (34).
References
The references below are cited in full in a separate map 'References'. Please click here if you are looking for the full references for France.
- Hoyois and Guha-Sapir (2003), In: Anderson (ed.) (2007)
- Anderson (ed.) (2007)
- Mitchell (2003)
- Barredo (2009)
- Höppe and Pielke Jr. (2006); Schiermeier (2006), both in: Barredo (2009)
- Höppe and Pielke Jr. (2006), in: Barredo (2009)
- Becker and Grunewald (2003); Glaser and Stangl (2003); Mudelsee et al.(2003); Kundzewicz et al.(2005); Pinter et al.(2006); Hisdal et al.(2007); Macklin and Rumsby (2007), all in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Wang et al.(2005), in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Milly et al. (2005), in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Hisdal et al. (2007), in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Ramos and Reis (2002), in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Barnolas and Llasat (2007), in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Lehner et al.(2006); Dankers and Feyen (2008b), both in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Christensen and Christensen (2003); Kundzewicz et al.(2006), both in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Palmer and Räisänen (2002), in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Kay et al. (2006); Dankers and Feyen (2008), in: EEA, JRC and WHO (2008)
- Andréasson, et al. (2004); Jasper et al.(2004); Barnett et al.(2005), all in: EEA (2009)
- Arnell (2004); Milly et al. (2005); Alcamo et al. (2007); Environment Agency (2008a), all in: EEA (2009)
- Dankers and Feyen (2008), in: EEA (2009)
- Ciscar et al. (2009), in: Behrens et al. (2010)
- Kundzewicz (2006)
- Kundzewicz (2002)
- UK Met Office (2011)
- Ducharne et al. (2011), in: UK Met Office (2011)
- Moatar et al. (2010), in: UK Met Office (2011)
- ONERC (2007/2009)
- IPCC (2012)
- Wilhelm et al. (2012)
- Feyen et al. (2012)
- Dumas et al. (2013)
- Giuntoli et al. (2012), in: Mediero et al. (2014)
- Merz et al. (2007), in: Kreibich et al. (2015)
- Fleischhauer (2005); Zimmerman et al. (2005), both in: Kreibich et al. (2015)
- Renard et al. (2008), in: Mediero et al. (2015)
- Mediero et al. (2015)