All Physical Risk Datasets: Difference between revisions
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=== Exposure Data === | === Exposure Data === | ||
These are data describing exposures to the climate hazard. Key features used to construct the exposures include geospatial data for corporates (including their value chains), location data for mortgage collateral, or data on counterparties’ sensitivity to energy prices or carbon emissions in the production and distribution processes. | |||
These are the data describing the financial exposure. | These are the data describing the financial exposure. | ||
* [https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/redti/overview Residential energy demand temperature index (REDTI):] | * [https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/redti/overview Residential energy demand temperature index (REDTI):] |
Revision as of 18:04, 3 October 2024
Climate Hazard Data
(note: add description under each dataset. add AWS link to the data; organized data in table format; coverage of space and time )
These are the data describing the drivers of physical risk. These data include climate information or information about current and projected hazard events. They may be used as explanatory variables to influence economic outcomes and alter existing economic relationships, or to identify at-risk locations with other geographical data (e.g. topographical data including coastal elevation models, satellite data), or cost and performance data for energy substitutes that can be used in estimating energy price relationships.[1]
Hot and Cold | Wet and Dry | Hurricanes and Storms | Ice and Snow | Coastal and Oceanic | Biodiversity |
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Exposure Data
These are data describing exposures to the climate hazard. Key features used to construct the exposures include geospatial data for corporates (including their value chains), location data for mortgage collateral, or data on counterparties’ sensitivity to energy prices or carbon emissions in the production and distribution processes.
These are the data describing the financial exposure.
Vulnerability Data
These are the data describing the vulnerability of exposures.
- Risk mapping by state and disaster by NCEI of NOAA[2]
- CDC/ATSDR social vulnerability index
- CDC/ATSDR environmental justice index
- Future climate-change related risk: View, Data Download
- Urban adaptation map viewer: https://climate-adapt.eea.europa.eu/en/knowledge/tools/urban-adaptation
Financial Data
- Historical disaster cost and frequency of the US by state and disaster type by NCEI of NOAA[2]
- EM-DAT data, the international database of worldwide disaster, hazards, and their damage from 1900 to present. The database is compiled from various sources, including UN agencies, non-governmental organizations, reinsurance companies, research institutes, and press agencies.
- CAT-DAT data
- Global Drought Proportional Economic Loss Risk Deciles
- FEMS's Hazus loss library
- Economic losses from weather- and climate- related extremes in Europe: https://www.eea.europa.eu/en/analysis/indicators/economic-losses-from-climate-related
- Climate related economic losses in Europe: View
- Economic losses and fatalities based on CATDATA: View
- NatCatSERVICE is a global natural catastrophe loss database provided by re-insurance company Munich Re. It is one of the world's most comprehensive databases on natural hazard-based disasters with more than 28 000 entries. It is based on over 200 sources worldwide, including news agencies, insurance companies, international agencies (UN, EU, Red Cross, etc.), scientific sources and weather and warning services. (Note to XL: it doesn't seem to be open-source, but it is listed by EEA).
References
- ↑ BCBS, April. "Climate-related financial risks–Measurement methodologies." (2021).
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) U.S. Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters (2024). https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/billions/, DOI: 10.25921/stkw-7w73