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ASSESSING THE VULNERABILITY OF THE TELECOMMUNICATIONS NETWORK TO IMPACTS FROM CLIMATE CHANGE: FOCUS ON NEW ENGLAND TREVELYN POTTER DR. PATRICK HALPIN, ADVISOR Climate Change Impacts in New England Increasing temperatures Increasing precipitation and precipitation intensity Increase in severe weather Sea Level Rise Wireless Communications Infrastructure Siting Overview Wikipedia Wikipedia Thefoa.org www.dasillc.com Current Environmental Considerations in Siting National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 FEMA and the 100 year Floodplain Wind Zones and Building Codes Potential Impacts from Climate Change Flood Damage Severe Weather Hurricanes Wind Damage Sea Level Rise Wirelessestimator.com FCC Registered Sites in Connecticut Town Population Ranking Population Percentiles 80 and above (High Capacity) 60 through 80 (High Capacity) 40 through 60 (Medium Capacity) Towns in Connecticut Stamford, Hartford, Bridgeport, Haven Waterbury New West Hartford, Manchester, Greenwich, Norwalk, Fairfield, Danbury, Hamden, Meriden, Bristol, New Britain Priority Ranked Sites Results Mapping the Vulnerabilities Floodplain Mapping 400 379 Site Count 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 5237 26 44 39 4 12 44 4 12 Total Medium Capacity High Capacity Hurricane Inundation Site Count 20 15 10 5 0 Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4 Hurricane Strength All Sites Medium Capacity High Capacity Sea Level Rise Data Availability for New England Data Category Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Rhode Hampshire Island Vermont Digital Flood Coverage Digital Elevation Model Partial Partial Partial Partial Complete Partial LIDAR-based LIDAR based Non-LIDAR LIDAR LIDAR - partial Hurricane Inundation Yes Yes Yes (ACOE only) Yes (ACOE Yes only) Wind Speed No No Yes (FEMA map) No Yes (for Yes windpower) Other Natural Disaster No No No No No Ice (1998) Telecom Infrastruct ure No Updated 1998 No Updated 2007 No Updated 2011 - LIDAR - partial N/A Storm Limitations of Existing GIS Data Not all structures are registered with the FCC Digital flood mapping is not available for all areas, particularly rural ones Hurricane Inundation data not broken down into categories for all areas Lack of LIDAR-based and local scale sea level rise mapping for many coastal areas Lack of fine-scale GIS wind data applicable to infrastructure of this type Lessons from the Past Ice Storm of 1998 Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Irene Hurricane Sandy Recommendations for the Future Consider areas of current “moderate risk” like 500 year floodplains and adjacent areas when making siting decisions Implement registration requirement for all licensed antenna sites Avoid projected coastal inundation areas Develop uniform regional or national data sets for vulnerability assessments Questions