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Projecting U.S. coastal storm surge risks and impacts with deep learning

16 June 2025
Julian R. Rice
Karthik Balaguru
Fadia Ticona Rollano
John Wilson
Brent Daniel
David Judi
Ning Sun
L. Ruby Leung
ArXiv (abs)PDFHTML
Main:7 Pages
17 Figures
Bibliography:10 Pages
Appendix:17 Pages
Abstract

Storm surge is one of the deadliest hazards posed by tropical cyclones (TCs), yet assessing its current and future risk is difficult due to the phenomenon's rarity and physical complexity. Recent advances in artificial intelligence applications to natural hazard modeling suggest a new avenue for addressing this problem. We utilize a deep learning storm surge model to efficiently estimate coastal surge risk in the United States from 900,000 synthetic TC events, accounting for projected changes in TC behavior and sea levels. The derived historical 100-year surge (the event with a 1% yearly exceedance probability) agrees well with historical observations and other modeling techniques. When coupled with an inundation model, we find that heightened TC intensities and sea levels by the end of the century result in a 50% increase in population at risk. Key findings include markedly heightened risk in Florida, and critical thresholds identified in Georgia and South Carolina.

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@article{rice2025_2506.13963,
  title={ Projecting U.S. coastal storm surge risks and impacts with deep learning },
  author={ Julian R. Rice and Karthik Balaguru and Fadia Ticona Rollano and John Wilson and Brent Daniel and David Judi and Ning Sun and L. Ruby Leung },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.13963},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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