Flood monitoring from space: A Q&A with flood expert Beth Tellman

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people kayaking on a flooded street

A flooded road in Houston in September 2017.

In the face of a changing climate, flood monitoring has become a critical area of study, with the potential to significantly impact communities worldwide. 

The U.S. experienced a particularly intense flooding season in spring 2024, with various regions grappling with unprecedented water levels. 

Beth Tellman, an assistant professor in the University of Arizona School of Geography, Development, and Environment in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, uses satellite imagery to improve our understanding of where floods have happened and are currently happening. She also uses machine learning models to develop datasets for flood monitoring. Her work aims to improve assessment of populations vulnerable to flood exposure and aid in the understanding of interactions between land cover, climate change and floods. 

Tellman talked to University of Arizona News about how flood maps are created and how satellite monitoring helps translate people's flood experiences into maps for policymakers. 

Q: What are your current projects related to flooding?

A:  One important focus of our projects is on improving algorithms to detect water and floods from satellite images. Some of that work is NASA-funded and has applied aspects within NASA itself. For example, one of the most used satellite sensors in flood monitoring is the VIIRS, or Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite, which is a NASA-funded project. VIIRS captures one to two images per day everywhere on Earth. This makes it useful for monitoring floods on a global scale. 

We are also working with applied data and algorithms in real-world situations. Currently, we are partnering with community-based organizations in the Rio Grande Valley, Texas, building a satellite-based flood database. The database is not just based on our algorithms in the lab and the satellite data. Rather, we are retraining our algorithms with data and experiences from our partners and the people. We also have a major applied project partnering with the Government of Bangladesh for doing flood monitoring with satellites. 

My newest project is about trying to create a U.S. flood database to understand how urban development influences new flood patterns. I was awarded an NSF CAREER Award for this project, which involves tracking urban development. If someone builds flood control infrastructure, they often will register that with FEMA, or the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to remove their property from the regulatory flood plain to either increase the property value or reduce insurance costs. We are building a spatial history of where urban development has changed the FEMA regulatory flood plain in the U.S. to see if that's really decreasing flooding or if that's just moving floodwaters downstream to other communities. So, we're using satellite imagery together with government records of urban development in flood plains to try and see if there is any flood inequality in the U.S. 

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Beth Tellman

Beth Tellman

Q: How do you map floods?

A: There are pretty good government records in the U.S. on where floods have happened. The NCEI, National Centers for Environmental Information, has a great storm events database, for instance. There are thousands of flood events that are recorded. Typically, county governments send those details in, so, we generally know where a flood has happened on a county scale. We can then pull all satellite imagery for that county and map all the floods we see in those images. On a global scale, we use a flood inventory we've been using for a long time called the Colorado flood observatory. They basically have an Excel spreadsheet of major global floods that appeared in the media. They've been keeping this up since the 1980s. Media can also be inventories of some kind; it gives you a sense of where a flood might have happened. We use media to pull the imagery and make high-resolution pictures of that flood event. 

Sometimes, we can use people's flood experiences and their own social media records to get data that may have otherwise not appeared in a government database. For example, in the Rio Grande Valley, when we asked people about the details of flooding, people shared their Facebook messages and texts they sent to other people. 

Q: What are the implications of these flood maps for the public and policymakers?

A: Our satellite images have helped translate people's flood experiences into a map of their entire area that they can then give to a policymaker or government official. We haven't mapped all tens of thousands of flood events in the U.S. yet. It's something I hope to do. In my NSF CAREER project, we mapped about 100 events in the U.S., but I'm working on building a very comprehensive map that would be helpful for understanding flood history. These maps would be helpful for big insurance companies and government agencies that look at large, impactful events. 

Q: What are some challenges in flood predictions?

A: Our research doesn't entail any flood prediction, only observation. Flood prediction is tricky because there are many different types of floods, and the science behind each type is different. For example, in riverine flooding, water overflows the riverbank. So, scientists will look at melting snowpack rates and seasonal predictions of rainfall to see if there's going to be a large flood. Coastal flooding from storm surge or from hurricanes is dealt with differently; tropical cyclone prediction is taken into account, and storm surge models are built. The other type of flooding, which is the hardest to predict, is pluvial flooding, which is the one that impacts most cities in the U.S. Here, flooding results from direct rainfall pounding on a surface. We are very bad at predicting those, because pluvial flooding often comes from convective storms, which are large downpours from thunderstorms –  a weather phenomenon notoriously hard to predict.

Q: There have been several floods in the U.S. over the past few months. Could you offer some perspective on that?

A: We've experienced some major flooding this spring. There was massive flooding from a large rainfall storm system in Houston. And there's a prediction for a record number of hurricanes this summer, which would probably bring in storm surge and flooding. We know from last summer that a warmer climate and a hotter summer means more ability for the atmosphere to hold water. We also know that stronger storms can occur because of these warming patterns. With warm ocean temperatures, we saw huge storms and pluvial flooding in the U.S. last year. I don't do flood predictions, but from what we know about what happened last year, I think we're probably in for big summer flooding in urban cities across the U.S. again.

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