Somalia Flood Prone Areas 2018
Data and Resources
This dataset has no data
Additional Info
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Source | https://app.mapx.org/static.html?views=MX-6WMMI-FLBDQ-0XF9X&zoomToViews=true#JAAc6 |
| Author | UNEP/GRID-Geneva |
| Maintainer | UNEP/GRID-Geneva |
| Last Updated | December 7, 2022, 08:20 (UTC) |
| Created | December 7, 2022, 08:20 (UTC) |
| GUID | MX-6WMMI-FLBDQ-0XF9X |
| Issued | 2020-09-28 13:27:19 |
| Language | EN |
| Modified | 2022-09-05 13:12:56 |
| Publisher email | info@mapx.org |
| Publisher name | UNEP/GRID-Geneva |
| Theme | Web Map |
| data_type | geospatial |
| keywords_m49 | SOM |
| projects_description | WESR-CCA: Somalia |
| projects_id | MX-YCD-XAV-LBN-PRT-TL1 |
| projects_title | WESR-CCA: Somalia |
| range_end_at_year | 2022 |
| range_start_at_year | 2018 |
| source_abstract | Somalia experiences two types of flooding: river floods and flash floods. River floods occur along the Juba and Shabelle rivers in Southern Somalia, whereas flash floods are common along the intermittent streams in the northern part of the country.in the recent past, the country has experienced an increasing severity and frequency of floods. The historically most recent severe floods were those of the Deyr in 1961, 1977, 1997, and 2006, and the floods of the Gu in 1981 and 2005. These floods resulted in human casualties and major economic damage.Whereas flash floods in Somalia result from localised rains, river flooding along the Juba and Shabelle rivers are primarily due to drainage from catchment areas located in the Ethiopian highlands, which normally experience heavier and more frequent rainfall than what occurs in Somalia. |
| source_title | Somalia Flood Prone Areas 2018 |
| spatial | SOM |