PhD Studentship: NERC Resilient Flood Futures (FLOOD-CDT). Understanding Record Breaking Flood Events

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Award summary 

100% of home fees covered, and a minimum tax-free annual living allowance of £19,237 (2024/25 UKRI rate), plus research project costs. 

Overview 

The Centre for Doctoral Training for Resilient Flood Futures (FLOOD-CDT) will train the next generation of research practitioners who will make a tangible difference to future flood management in the UK and internationally. Our goal is to provide a nurturing and inspiring training environment to develop the independent future leaders we need who can translate research and innovation into practice. Find out more here: https://flood-cdt.ac.uk/ 

The number of record-breaking flood events globally in recent years and the associated impacts is alarming. The European floods of 2021 had the highest river levels since records began and yielded US$54 billion worth of losses in damages (Tradowsky et al., 2023). The estimated return period for this event (400 years) has substantial uncertainty (95% CI: 250-2,500 years) which can hugely vary depending on data and methodology used. Accurate estimates are hindered by short observational records while model-based approaches (e.g. UNSEEN) that simulate large event sets do not accurately represent relevant processes that contribute to such extremes. Hence, estimating the changing risk of such events and choosing design levels for flood defenses is very challenging. 

This PhD project will develop a process-driven view of risk estimations that invokes a bottom-up approach in which will start with a specified flood level (e.g. flood barrier). Our main research question will be: ‘what rainfall volume is needed to exceed a given flood level and what combination of conditions could produce this level? This will aim to envision what such event might look like and identify the main contributing factors, the plausibility of their co-occurrences, and their projected changes in climate simulations. 

Number of awards 

Start date  

15th September 2025 

Award duration 

3.5 years 

Application closing date 

8th January 2025 

Sponsor 

Natural Environment Research Council 

Name of supervisor/s 

Colin Manning (Newcastle Universty) 

Eligibility Criteria 

You must have, or expect to gain, a minimum 2:1 Honours degree or international equivalent in a subject relevant to the proposed PhD project (inc. Geography, environmental science, engineering etc.). Enthusiasm for research, the ability to think and work independently, excellent analytical skills and strong verbal and written communication skills are also essential requirements.  

Home and international applicants (inc. EU) are welcome to apply and if successful will receive a full studentship. Applicants whose first language is not English require an IELTS score of 6.5 overall with a minimum of 5.5 in all sub-skills.  

How to apply 

Please visit our main funding advert for information on how to apply for this studentship. https://www.ncl.ac.uk/postgraduate/fees-funding/search-funding/?code=FLOOD256  

Contact Details 

  

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