Search for a command to run...
Floods are among the most frequent and destructive natural hazards in Kazakhstan, particularly in the Abai Region, Kazakhstan, where topographic, hydrological, and climatic factors strongly influence flood occurrence. This study presents a comprehensive spatial assessment of flood susceptibility in the Abai Region using a multi-criteria Geographic Information System (GIS) approach. The analysis integrates twelve flood-conditioning factors representing hydrological, topographic, environmental, and anthropogenic variables. The relative importance of these factors was determined using the Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP). The results indicate that distance to rivers (20%) and precipitation (16%) are the most influential drivers of flood susceptibility, followed by Height Above Nearest Drainage (HAND) (11%) and drainage density (9%). The resulting flood susceptibility map classifies the study area into five susceptibility levels. Approximately 56.6% of the study area falls within the moderate susceptibility class, while 25.0% is categorized as high susceptibility, mainly concentrated in low-lying floodplains and foothill regions. Low-susceptibility areas account for 18.1% of the region, whereas the very high and very low susceptibility classes together represent less than 1% of the territory. Model performance was evaluated using Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis, yielding an Area Under the Curve (ROC–AUC) value of 0.893, indicating strong agreement between predicted susceptibility patterns and observed flood occurrences. Additional validation metrics derived from the confusion matrix show an overall accuracy of 83.3%, precision of 0.75, recall of 1.0, and a Kappa coefficient of 0.67, confirming reliable predictive performance. Sensitivity analysis with ±10% variation in factor weights further demonstrated the spatial stability of the susceptibility results. The resulting susceptibility map provides an important spatial basis for infrastructure planning, flood mitigation, and disaster preparedness in the Abai Region and offers a transferable framework for flood-susceptibility assessment in other semi-arid regions of Central Asia.