Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
DISASTER PROTECTION A Time-Dependent and PolicyDriven Process to Protect a City’s Transportation Systems From Disaster Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA THE FOCUS: FROM UN—PROTECTED TO PROTECTED TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS A CITY CAN BECOME DISASTER RESILIENT WHEN … ITS PEOPLE, BUILDINGS, INFRASTRUCTURE, ESSENTIAL AND CRITICAL FACILITIES ARE PROTECTED BY CODES & STANDARDS AGAINST THE POTENTIAL DISASTER AGENTS OF LIKELY NATURAL HAZARDS RISK ASSESSMENT •NATURAL HAZARDS •INVENTORY •VULNERABILITY •LOCATION ACCEPTABLE RISK RISK UNACCEPTABLE RISK GOAL: DISASTER RESILIENCE DATA BASES AND INFORMATION COMMUNITY FOUR PILLARS OF RESILIENCE HAZARDS: GROUND SHAKING GROUND FAILURE SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN UP AFTERSHOCKS •PREPAREDNESS •PROTECTION •EMERGENCY RESPONSE •RECOVERY IENCE A DISASTER OCCURS WHEN A COMMUNITY’S PUBLIC POLICIES ALLOW IT TO BE … UN—PREPARED UN—PROTECTED UN—ABLE TO RESPOND EFFECTIVELY UN (NON)--RESILIENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS • Provide an essential function to society by moving people and goods from point “A” to point “B” TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS • Types: Roads, railroads, mass transit, water-borne and air transport systems, and pipelines • Scales: urban, regional, national, and international. ELEMENTS OF TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS • Built infrastructure • roads, runways, airports, terminals, railways, stations, canals, ports, traffic control centers, maintenance and operation facilities, pipelines, etc. • Operations side • vehicles, traffic safety and control, power, communications and signaling, maintenance, transportation operators, etc. FEATURES THAT AFFECT RESILIENCY Extend over broad geographical areas (exposed to many kinds of natural hazards) Large number of components that are subject to either POINT or AREA failure (multiple types of vulnerabilities). FEATURES THAT AFFECT RESILIENCY (Continued) Roadways and railways frequently follow river valleys (easier and cheaper to build, but prone to floods) Utilities, including pipelines, often follow right-of-ways (reduces legal problems and costs) FEATURES THAT AFFECT RESILIENCY (Continued) Multiple entities have responsibility for, or oversight of the system (variable policies) Typically owned by public entities and publicly funded (usually self-insured) FEATURES THAT AFFECT RESILIENCY (Continued) Different modes of transportation are interconnected They interact with each other and other elements of a community’s built environment; hence, the name, “City Lifeline Systems”. WITHOUT PROTECTION (i.e., building codes and lifeline standards), NATURAL DISASTERS CAN, AND USUALLY DO, CAUSE GREAT LOSS OF FUNCTION IN CITY TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS HIGHWAY SYSTEMS: CAN LOSE FUNCTION FROM: Flooding from tropical storms, hurricanes, and typhoons, Landslides (rock falls, spreads, slides, flows) Earthquakes (ground shaking) AIR TRANSPORT SYSTEMS CAN LOSE THEIR FUNCTION FROM: Earthquakes (ground shaking and ground failure) Tsunamis (tsunami wave run up) Tornadoes (wind damage) SENDAI AIRPORT: COVERED WITH MUD FROM TSUNAMI SENDAI AIRPORT: COVERED WITH CARS, MUD, & DEBRIS TORNADO DAMAGES LAMBERT AIRPORT; ST LOUIS, MO, UISA RAILROAD SYSTEMS CAN LOSE THEIR FUNCTION FROM: Earthquakes (ground shaking and ground failure) JAPAN: PASSENGERS STRANDED IN SENDAI STATION PIPELINE SYSTEMS CAN LOSE THEIR FUNCTION FROM: Earthquakes (ground shaking and ground failure) DISASTER RESILIENCE REQUIRES CITIES TO ADOPT AND IMPLEMENT PUBLIC POLICIES TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE STATE OF BEING: UN—PREPARED UN—PROTECTED UN—ABLE TO RESPOND AND NON--RESILIENT