in the town of Horsens by 2,5 meter flooding.
NONAM Risk Assessment and Stakeholder Investment. Multidisciplinary Workshop in Reykjavík 26 – 27 August 2010 5
Figure 5 River basin Bygholm. Examples of challenges in the different sectors/areas
Summery of challenges in sectors/subareas:
Industrial Area Owners
• Excess water from (heavy) rainfalls from roofs, roads and parking areas
/media/loftslag/Case_A___Horsens_Fjord.pdf
at the
outlet in Horsens fjord. At Dagnæs bæk there is a slues.
Summery of challenges in sectors/subareas:
Industrial Area Owners
• Excess water from (heavy) rainfalls from roofs, roads and parking areas. Cooling of buildings.
• Needs derating of water run-off, intelligent use of excess water.
Farmers
• Drought damage (summer), flooded areas (winter), erosion during heavy rain
/media/loftslag/Horsens_case.pdf
world we live in is continuously changing and developing. Changes in one field often
lead to shifts in others. Since the industrial revolution, human lifestyle has significantly influenced
the Earth’s atmospheric composition, which is directly and indirectly an important factor in a deli-
cate balance of numerous natural phenomena. Anthropogenic actions have thus caused, or sped up
alterations
/media/vedurstofan-utgafa-2020/VI_2020_005.pdf
Division,
Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), 11Land and Water, Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organization (CSIRO)
Ecology and Society 15(4): 11
http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art11/
resources to make and implement management
actions that meet a majority of needs. This is
especially the case in most Western-style
/media/loftslag/Moellenkampetal_etal-2010.pdf
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/media/ces/2010_017.pdf
into the following sectors/subareas:
o Industrial area owners (excess water, cooling, buffering and intelligent use of excess
water)
o Farmers (drought prevention, flooded areas, irrigation, nutrients, financing adaptations)
o Hedensted upstream city (flooding risks, vulnerable to rising groundwater, excess
water and recreational area management)
o Horsens city at the fiord mouth (rising sea-level, storm
/media/vedurstofan/NONAM_1st_workshop_summary_v3.pdf
The hydrological simulations were performed with the Wa-
tershed Simulation and Forecasting System (WSFS) developed
and operated in the Finnish Environment Institute (Vehviläinen
et al., 2005). The WSFS is used in Finland for operational hydrolog-
ical forecasting and flood warnings (www.environment.fi/water-
forecast/), regulation planning and research purposes
(Vehviläinen and Huttunen, 1997
/media/ces/Journal_of_Hydrology_Veijalainen_etal.pdf
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/media/loftslag/Hare-2011-ParticipatoryModelling.pdf