Inundación

Definition

Flood is usually used as a general term to describe the overflow of water from a stream channel into normally dry land in the floodplain (riverine flooding), higher-than–normal levels along the coast and in lakes or reservoirs (coastal flooding) as well as ponding of water at or near the point where the rain fell (flash floods) (IRDR Glossary).

Facts and figures

Floods are the natural hazard with the highest frequency and the widest geographical distribution worldwide. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)  flooding is one of the most common, widespread and destructive natural perils, affecting approximately 250 million people worldwide and causing more than $40 billion in damage and losses on an annual basis (OECD).

Flooding occurs most commonly from heavy rainfall when natural watercourses lack the capacity to convey excess water. It can also result from other phenomena, particularly in coastal areas, by a storm surge associated with a tropical cyclone, a tsunami or a high tide. Dam failure, triggered by an earthquake, for instance, will lead to flooding of the downstream area, even in dry weather conditions.

Various climatic and non-climatic processes can result in different types of floods: riverine floods, flash floods, urban floods, glacial lake outburst floods and coastal floods.

Flood magnitude depends on precipitation intensity, volume, timing and phase, from the antecedent conditions of rivers and the drainage basins (frozen or not or saturated soil moisture or unsaturated) and status. Climatological parameters that are likely to be affected by climate change are precipitation, windstorms, storm surges and sea-level rise (UNDRR).

When floodwaters recede, affected areas are often blanketed in silt and mud. The water and landscape can be contaminated with hazardous materials such as sharp debris, pesticides, fuel, and untreated sewage. Potentially dangerous mold blooms can quickly overwhelm water-soaked structures. Residents of flooded areas can be left without power and clean drinking water, leading to outbreaks of deadly waterborne diseases like typhoid, hepatitis A, and cholera (UNDRR).

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Related content on the Knowledge Portal

  • Due to heavy rains at the end of June, and the consequent rise in river levels, more than 1,000 houses have been flooded in Chernivtsy and Ivano-Frankivsk regions.

    Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/

  • Since July 5 2010, the long rains have been pounding a part of the territory of the Republic of Moldova. A lot of localities were affected in the country, as Nemteni, Cotul Morii as well as Obileni. According to the preliminary data received from Emergency Service Centre of Moldova, the average number of disaster-affected residencies in the regions is some 600 houses. As a result, over 2000 people have been evacuated from the projected course of the waters.

    Source and more information on http://www.gov.md

     

    Available Space-based Information for: Floods in Moldova

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    Status Update: 09/07/2010

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  • Due to heavy rains in the past week water levels of several rivers in Bosnia and Herzegovina have risen. On 22 June water spilled out of the river beds in several municipalities, damaging land and residential objects across the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as Republika Srpska and Br?ko district.

    Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/

  • Heavy rains which began in 23 June have caused floods in the north-east and north of Romania damaging and floods 4,384 households and affecting more than 12,237 people.

    Source: glidenumber

  • Monsoon rains triggered major flooding in northeastern India, submerging hundreds of villages and forcing thousands of people to abandon.

    Source: glidenumber

  • The north eastern and northern districts including Sylhet, Moulavibazar, Sunamganj, Habiganj, Netrokona, Kurigram, Gaibandha, Lalmonirhat of Bangladesh have been inundated due to heavy downpour and of on-rush flood water from upstream (Assam and Meghalaya in India) for last couple of weeks.

    Source: glidenumber

  • As of 22 June, according to government statistics, the latest round of floods which began early in the month of June has affected more than 29 million people and 1.6 million hectares of crops in the areas of Zhejiang, Fujian, Jiangxi, Hubei, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Chongqing, Sichuan and Guizhou. The downpours triggered flash floods, inundated crops, destroyed reservoirs and irrigation facilities, and disrupted traffic and telecommunications Latest figures indicate that up to 199 people have perished, 123 people are missing, 2.37 million people were evacuated, and 195,000 houses collapsed, with direct economic losses amounting to approximately CNY 42.1 billion (CHF 7.01 billion or EUR 5.03 billion).

    Source: glidenumber

  • Hundreds without shelter after floods caused by a tropical wave moving westward.

    Source: glidenumber

  • Torrents of flood water devastated towns and villages in northeastern Brazil, killing at least 38 people and leaving more than 600 missing and more than 50,000 without shelter.

    Source: glidenumber

  • Relief has been delivered to population affected by floods, heavy rains and landslides in the province of Panama.

    Source: glidenumber

Term Parents

UN-SPIDER Regional Support Offices with hazard-specific expertise