TY - JOUR
T1 - Anatomy of a foreseeable disaster
T2 - Lessons from the 2023 dam-breaching flood in Derna, Libya
AU - Armon, Moshe
AU - Shmilovitz, Yuval
AU - Dente, Elad
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 the Authors, some rights reserved.
PY - 2025/3/28
Y1 - 2025/3/28
N2 - Was the catastrophic flooding in Derna, Libya—one of the deadliest hydrometeorological disasters on record—an inevitable outcome of rare weather conditions, or did the design of the infrastructure fail to account for probable risks? On 10 to 11 September 2023, Storm Daniel, a Mediterranean tropical-like cyclone, caused heavy rainfall that led to the collapse of two dams and more than 5000 casualties in Derna. Using a combination of atmospheric reanalysis, satellite data, and hydrologic modeling, we overcame key limitations typical of data-scarce, high-variability regions and revealed that despite the catastrophic impact, the return periods of the rainfall and flood were only a few decades. Hydraulic simulations revealed that the dam failures amplified the damage nearly 20-fold compared to a dam-free scenario. With extensive and timely implications, our findings underscore the importance of uncertainty-aware risk assessment and highlight the value of distributed flood prevention and early warning systems in mitigating risks in vulnerable regions.
AB - Was the catastrophic flooding in Derna, Libya—one of the deadliest hydrometeorological disasters on record—an inevitable outcome of rare weather conditions, or did the design of the infrastructure fail to account for probable risks? On 10 to 11 September 2023, Storm Daniel, a Mediterranean tropical-like cyclone, caused heavy rainfall that led to the collapse of two dams and more than 5000 casualties in Derna. Using a combination of atmospheric reanalysis, satellite data, and hydrologic modeling, we overcame key limitations typical of data-scarce, high-variability regions and revealed that despite the catastrophic impact, the return periods of the rainfall and flood were only a few decades. Hydraulic simulations revealed that the dam failures amplified the damage nearly 20-fold compared to a dam-free scenario. With extensive and timely implications, our findings underscore the importance of uncertainty-aware risk assessment and highlight the value of distributed flood prevention and early warning systems in mitigating risks in vulnerable regions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001700291&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1126/sciadv.adu2865
DO - 10.1126/sciadv.adu2865
M3 - Article
C2 - 40153510
AN - SCOPUS:105001700291
SN - 2375-2548
VL - 11
JO - Science advances
JF - Science advances
IS - 13
M1 - eadu2865
ER -