
Erin Coughlan de PerezRed Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre
Erin Coughlan de Perez
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60
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1,948
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Citations since 2017
Publications
Publications (60)
Armed conflict increases people's vulnerability to climate extremes. Since many of these climate extremes are predictable beforehand, Early Warning Early Action (EWEA) can help protect people's lives, livelihoods, and wellbeing. While such EWEA systems exist in several countries, there is limited scientific knowledge about EWEA in conflict-affected...
Climate change and solar geoengineering have different implications for drought. Climate change can “speed up” the hydrological cycle, but it causesgreater evapotranspiration than the historical climate because of higher temperatures. Solar geoengineering (stratospheric aerosol injection), on the other hand, tends to “slow down” the hydrological cy...
As a crucially-needed adaptation to climate change, the United Nations plans to expand Early Warning Systems (EWS) for extreme weather to cover everyone on Earth. Given the growing interest in this climate change adaptation solution, we assess how well weather early warnings perform for extreme events in different parts of the world. First, we carr...
As climate change increases the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, governments and civil society organizations are making large investments in early warning systems (EWS) with the aim to avoid death and destruction from hydro-meteorological events. Early warning systems have four components: (1) risk knowledge, (2) monitoring and wa...
This paper presents evidence relating to a forecast-based cash and non-food item distribution among vulnerable herder households during the 2017-18 dzud (extreme winter) season in Mongolia, and analyses the results of a quasi-experimental study evaluating its impacts. An innovative approach in disaster risk reduction, forecast-based financing (FbF)...
As a crucially-needed adaptation to climate change, the United Nations plans to expand Early Warning Systems (EWS) for extreme weather to cover everyone on Earth. Given the growing interest in this
climate change adaptation solution, we assess how well EWS might perform in different parts of the world and overlay these results with climate change p...
Growing evidence suggests that climate adaptation responses that do not incorporate equity considerations may worsen inequality and increase vulnerability. Using data from a systematic review of peer-reviewed empirical research on adaptation responses to climate change (n = 1,682), we present an assessment of how social equity is considered in adap...
Weather forecasts, climate change projections, and epidemiological predictions all represent domains that are using forecast data to take early action for risk management. However, the methods and applications of the modeling efforts in each of these three fields have been developed and applied with little cross-fertilization. This perspective iden...
Flooding in the Amazon basin is frequently attributed to modes of large-scale climate variability, but little attention is paid to how these modes influence the timing and duration of floods despite their importance to early warning systems and the significant impacts that these flood characteristics can have on communities. In this study, river di...
Extreme heat events impact people and ecosystems across the globe, and they are becoming more frequent and intense in a warming climate. Responses to heat span sectors and geographic boundaries. Prior research has documented technologies or options that can be deployed to manage extreme heat and examples of how individuals, communities, governments...
The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) dominates the conversation about predictability of climate extremes and early warning and preparedness for floods and droughts, but in Africa other modes of climate variability are also known to influence rainfall anomalies. In this study, we compare the role of ENSO in driving flood hazard over sub-Saharan A...
In the face of climate change, development and humanitarian practitioners increasingly recognize the need to anticipate and manage multiple, concurrent risks. One prominent example of this increasing focus on anticipation is the rapid growth of Forecast-based Financing (FbF), in particular within Red Cross and Red Crescent (RCRC). To evaluate how a...
Since 2010, States party to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change have recognized planned relocation as a viable adaptation to climate change. Planned relocation has been attempted in many communities globally and has raised serious issues of equity in some cases. Implementation driven by principles of equity is crucial in ensur...
Within the humanitarian sector, there is a pressing need to scale up anticipatory action as climate change-related disasters increase. This article evaluates forecasts relating to extreme weather events – extreme rainfall, tropical cyclones, river flooding and storm surge – in Myanmar and the Philippines to assess the feasibility of using such fore...
Extreme weather and climate events associated with El Niño and La Niña cause massive societal impacts. Therefore, observations and forecasts are used around the world to prepare for such events. However, global warming has caused warm El Niño events to seem bigger than they are, while cold La Niña events seem smaller, in the commonly used Niño3.4 i...
Flooding in the Amazon basin is frequently attributed to modes of large-scale climate variability, but little attention is paid to how these modes influence the timing and duration of floods despite their importance to early warning systems and the significant impacts that these flood characteristics can have on communities. In this study, river di...
Context : It is now widely accepted that the climate is changing, and that societal response will need to be rapid and comprehensive to prevent the most severe impacts. A key milestone in global climate governance is to assess progress on adaptation. To-date, however, there has been negligible robust, systematic synthesis of progress on adaptation...
Context : It is now widely accepted that the climate is changing, and that societal responses will need to be rapid and comprehensive to prevent the most severe impacts. A key milestone in global climate governance is to assess progress on adaptation. To-date, however, there has been negligible robust, systematic synthesis of progress on adaptation...
Context : It is now widely accepted that the climate is changing, and that societal response will need to be rapid and comprehensive to prevent the most severe impacts. A key milestone in global climate governance is to assess progress on adaptation. To-date, however, there has been negligible robust, systematic synthesis of progress on adaptation...
Anomalous conditions in the oceans and atmosphere have the potential to be used to enhance the predictability of flood events, enabling earlier warnings to reduce risk. In the Amazon basin, extreme flooding is consistently attributed to warmer or cooler conditions in the tropical Pacific and Atlantic oceans, with some evidence linking floods to oth...
Impact-based forecasting enables anticipatory actions and revolutionises responses
to weather and climate crises: turning forecasts and warnings from descriptions of
what the weather will be into assessments of what the weather will be into
assessments of what the weather will do enables organisations and individuals across
the world to anticipate...
In 2017, Bangladesh experienced the worst floods in recent decades. Based on a forecast and pre-defined trigger level, a Red Cross Red Crescent project distributed an unconditional cash grant of BDT 5000 (USD 60 equivalent) to 1039 poor households in highly vulnerable, flood-prone communities in the Brahmaputra river basin before an early flood pea...
Extreme flooding impacts millions of people that live within the
Amazon floodplain. Global hydrological models (GHMs) are frequently used to
assess and inform the management of flood risk, but knowledge on the skill
of available models is required to inform their use and development. This
paper presents an intercomparison of eight different GHMs fr...
Forecast-based actions are increasingly receiving attention in floodrisk management.However, uncertainties and constraints in forecast skill highlight the need to carefully assess the cost and benefits of the actions in relation to the limitations of forecast information. Forecast skill decreases with increasing lead time, and therefore ,an inheren...
Flood early warning systems play a more substantial role in risk mitigation than ever before. Hydrological forecasts, which are an essential part of these systems, are used to trigger action against floods around the world. This research presents an evaluation framework, where the skills of the Global Flood Awareness System (GloFAS) are assessed in...
Climate resilience is increasingly prioritized by international development agencies and national governments. However, current approaches to informing communities of future climate risk are problematic. The predominant focus on end‐of‐century projections neglects more pressing development concerns, which relate to the management of shorter‐term ri...
Extreme flooding impacts millions of people that live within the Amazon floodplain. Global Hydrological Models (GHMs) are frequently used to assess and inform the management of flood risk, but knowledge on the skill of available models is required to inform their use and development. This paper presents an intercomparison of eight different GHMs fr...
East Africa experiences chronic food insecurity, with levels varying from year-to-year across the region. Given that much can be done to prevent this level of suffering before it happens, humanitarian agencies monitor early indicators of food insecurity to trigger early action. Forecasts of total seasonal rainfall are one tool used to monitor and a...
To take early action before a potential disaster, humanitarians continually request several weeks of preparation time. This is currently outside the realm of traditional weather forecasts, and sub-seasonal to seasonal (S2S) forecasts are poised to meet this demand. This chapter provides a case study of a pilot project in Peru that used S2S forecast...
In April 2017, over 70 scientists, policymakers and practitioners from 32 countries convened at the International Conference on Climate Risk Management in Nairobi, Kenya. This conference utilized innovative approaches to facilitate a process of constructive, critical reflection of the existing climate risk management knowledge base, as well as its...
The socioeconomic impacts of flooding are huge. Between 1980 and 2013, flood losses exceeded $1 trillion globally, and resulted in approximately 220,000 fatalities. To reduce these negative impacts of floods, effective flood risk management is required. Reducing risk globally is at the heart of two recent international agreements: the Sendai Framew...
Extreme temperatures are one of the leading causes of death and disease in both developed and developing countries, and heat extremes are projected to rise in many regions. To reduce risk, heatwave plans and cold weather plans have been effectively implemented around the world. However, much of the world's population is not yet protected by such sy...
Empirical evidence shows that acting on early warnings can help humanitarian organizations reduce losses, damages and suffering while reducing costs. Available forecasts of extreme events can provide the information required to automatically trigger preparedness measures, while ‘value of information’ approaches can, in principle, guide the selectio...
Humanitarian organizations are increasingly interested in using seasonal forecasts to prepare for and mitigate the impacts of potential disasters before they begin. El Niño teleconnections increase the predictability of flooding and drought events in Southern and Eastern Africa, providing humanitarian stakeholders with advanced warning of potential...
Most flood early warning systems have predominantly
focused on forecasting floods with lead times of hours or days. However,
physical processes during longer timescales can also contribute to flood
generation. In this study, we follow a pragmatic approach to analyse the
hydro-meteorological pre-conditions of 501 historical damaging floods from
1980...
From 27 – 29 June 2017, the 2017 Global Flood Partnership Conference was held at the
University of Alabama, U.S.A. More than 90 participants attended the conference coming
from 11 different countries in 5 continents. They represented 56 institutions including
international organisations, the private sector, national authorities, universities,
gover...
This paper proposes a heat wave definition for Bangladesh that could be used to trigger preparedness measures in a heat early warning system (HEWS) and explores the climate mechanisms associated with heat waves. A HEWS requires a definition of heat waves that is both related to human health outcomes and forecastable. No such definition has been dev...
In light of strong encouragement for disaster managers to use climate
services for flood preparation, we question whether seasonal rainfall
forecasts should indeed be used as indicators of the likelihood of flooding.
Here, we investigate the primary indicators of flooding at the seasonal
timescale across sub-Saharan Africa. Given the sparsity of hy...
Climate shocks contribute to a significant share of the humanitarian burden, and are a key factor in increasing poverty and food insecurity. Social protection is increasingly recognised as an instrument to help build resilience to climate risks through long-term, large-scale national systems. However, most experiences to date have focused on social...
In light of strong encouragement for disaster managers to use climate services for flood preparation, we question whether seasonal rainfall forecasts should indeed be used as indicators of the likelihood of flooding. Here, we investigate the primary drivers of flooding at the seasonal timescale across sub-Saharan Africa. Given the sparsity of hydro...
Too often, credible scientific early warning information of
increased disaster risk does not result in humanitarian action. With
financial resources tilted heavily towards response after a disaster,
disaster managers have limited incentive and ability to process complex
scientific data, including uncertainties. These incentives are beginning to
cha...
Probabilistic hydro-meteorological forecasts have over the last decades been
used more frequently to communicate forecast uncertainty. This uncertainty is
twofold, as it constitutes both an added value and a challenge for the
forecaster and the user of the forecasts. Many authors have demonstrated the
added (economic) value of probabilistic over de...
Too often, credible scientific early warning information of increased disaster risk does not result in humanitarian action. With financial resources tilted heavily towards response after a disaster, disaster managers have limited incentive and ability to process complex scientific data, including uncertainties. These incentives are beginning to cha...
Southeast Brazil experienced profound water shortages in 2014/15. Anthropogenic climate change is not found to be a major influence on the hazard, whereas increasing population and water consumption increased vulnerability.
Humanitarian organizations have a crucial role in response and relief efforts after floods. The effectiveness of disaster response is contingent on accurate and timely information regarding the location, timing and impacts of the event. Here we show how two near-real-time data sources, satellite observations of water coverage and flood-related soci...
Global flood risk models were developed to identify risk hotspots in a world with increasing flood occurrence. Here we assess the ability and limitations of the current models and suggest what is needed moving forward.
Disaster risk reduction efforts traditionally focus on long-term
preventative measures or post-disaster response. Outside of these, there are
many short-term actions, such as evacuation, that can be implemented in the
period of time between a warning and a potential disaster to reduce the risk
of impacts. However, this precious window of opportunit...
Significance
Understanding the vulnerability of societies around the world is crucial for understanding historical trends in flood risk and for producing accurate projections of fatalities and losses. We reproduced historical river flood occurrence using daily climate data for the period 1980–2010 and quantified the natural and socioeconomic contri...
While climate variability and change affect global patterns of disease, there are few examples of methods that effectively integrate climate into health programming. This study examines a Red Cross Red Crescent pilot project in Kenya, Tanzania, Vietnam, and Indonesia that incorporated climate information and considerations in health operations. Our...
Disaster risk reduction efforts traditionally focus on long-term
preventative measures or post-disaster response. Outside of these,
there are many short-term actions, such as evacuation, that can be
implemented in the period of time between a warning and a potential
disaster to reduce the risk of impacts. However, this precious
window of opportunit...
Scientific climate information can save lives and livelihoods, yet its application is not always straightforward. Much of the available information does not describe the risk of threshold events, and misunderstandings can leave society less resilient to climate shocks.
Since 2005, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre have had an ongoing partnership with the International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI) to connect end-users with providers of climate information. This partnership has enabled and encouraged the uptake of c...
Projects
Projects (2)
Global evidence of human adaptations to global climate change. What actions are being taken? Are they sufficient or adequate to deal with climate change? Are they equitable? How are they implemented and evaluated?
- provide an operational definition of heat waves in Bangladesh
- quantify the health costs of heat waves in Bangladesh
- understand the climate and meteorological drivers of heat waves
- explore heat wave predictability at multiple timescales
- develop extreme heat forecasting methodologies