An Agent-Based Model of Flood Risk and Insurance
Authored by Igor Nikolic, Jan Dubbelboer, Katie Jenkins, Jim Hall
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3135
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Pseudocode
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/4647/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
Flood risk emerges from the dynamic interaction between natural hazards
and human vulnerability. Methods for the quantification of flood risk
are well established, but tend to deal with human and economic
vulnerability as being static or changing with an exogenously defined
trend. In this paper we present an Agent-Based Model (ABM) developed to
simulate the dynamical evolution of flood risk and vulnerability, and
facilitate an investigation of insurance mechanism in London. The ABM
has been developed to firstly allow an analysis of the vulnerability of
homeowners to surface water flooding, which is one of the greatest
short-term climate risks in the UK with estimated annual costs of 1.3bn
pound to 2.2bn pound. These costs have been estimated to increase by
60-220\% over the next 5 0 years due to climate change and urbanisation.
Vulnerability is influenced by homeowner's decisions to move house
and/or installmeasures to protect their properties from flooding. In
particular, the ABM focuses on the role of flood insurance, simulating
the current public-private partnership between the government and
insurers in the UK, and the forthcoming re-insurance scheme Flood Re,
designed as a roadmap to support the future affordability and
availability of flood insurance. The ABM includes interaction between
homeowners, sellers and buyers, an insurer, a local government and a
developer. Detailed GIS and qualitative data of the London borough of
Camden are used to represent an area at high risk of surface water
flooding. The ABM highlights how future development can exacerbate
current levels of surface water flood risk in Camden. Investment in
flood protection measures are shown to be beneficial for reducing
surface water flood risk. The Flood Re scheme is shown to achieve its
aim of securing affordable flood insurance premiums, however, is placed
under increasing pressure in the future as the risk of surface water
flooding continues to increase.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
behavior
Management
Flooding
Flood insurance
London
Flood re