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Earthquake Loss Estimation

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Earthquake Loss Estimation Session 3 Mr. James Daniell Risk Analysis Earthquake Risk Analysis * During the first 2 sessions, the Hazard, Vulnerability and Exposure ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Earthquake Loss Estimation


1
Earthquake Loss Estimation
Session 3 Mr. James Daniell
Risk Analysis Earthquake Risk Analysis
2
Learning Objectives
  • Learn how to undertake an earthquake loss
    estimation
  • Know how to convolve the hazard, exposure and
    vulnerability using damage loss conversion and
    uncertainties
  • Know what socio-economic loss components are
    needed in an earthquake loss estimation
  • Know where earthquake risk analysis fits into
    earthquake risk management.
  • Know what global software tools are available to
    undertake an earthquake loss estimation
  • Understand that there are many uncertainties that
    can only be quantified by earthquake loss
    estimation engineers.

3
Why do we undertake Earthquake Loss Estimation?
The number of earthquakes are the same but
exposure is increasing, therefore losses are
increasing
  • Total Economic losses for earthquake and
    secondary effect events from Jan 1900 Marc
    2010, CAT DAT Damaging Earthquake Catalogue
  • Developing Country Losses
  • Developed Country Losses


3
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Earthquake Loss Estimation - towards mitigation
  • Earthquake loss estimation is the combination of
    three main factors hazard, vulnerability and
    asset value.
  • Losses are the decrease in asset value resulting
    from damage.
  • Losses are typically given in terms of the number
    of damaged assets, or as a cost such as the
    cost to replace or repair the damaged assets.
  • Acceptable Risk and Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Loss estimation studies are very useful tool for
    developing emergency preparedness plans and for
    promoting seismic risk mitigation.

Seismic Risk, loss, mitigation, acceptable risk,
cost-benefit.

4
5
Earthquake Loss Estimation
Adapted from RiskScape, 2009

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6
What influences damage-loss conversion?
Population Density
Magnitude, depth duration of EQ source
Distance from quake source

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Damage-Loss Conversion
  • After the vulnerability assessment, the
    infrastructure damage is expressed as the no. of
    infrastructure per geocell, in a damage state
    (none to collapse) or as a damage ratio with
    variability.
  • A relationship of economic and social loss
    estimates for each of these damage states is
    needed!
  • If the scenario is changed, building damage needs
    to be recalculated.

Age Pre-1970 Pre-1970 Post-1970 Post-1970
Type URM Timber URM Timber
Geocell B 0.269 0.151 0.077 0.055
Geocell E 0.811 0.603 0.396 0.269
OR

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Direct vs. Indirect Impact
Earthquake Impacts
deaths, injuries, homeless, evacuated and
affected population
calculated via empirical historical EQ ratios of
losses, or analytical numerical models
Social
repair and reconstruction costs associated with
infrastructure damage
direct
Economic
Psycho-social trauma, weakening of institutions,
Social
a consequence of the direct physical damage
associated with the earthquake
indirect
Business interruption, diminished production and
services
Economic
8
9
Direct Economic Loss Conversion
  • The replacement cost is usually calculated
    multiplying the floor area, construction cost per
    unit area, number of buildings and number of
    storeys.
  • Empirical repair ratios can be derived for each
    of these damage levels vs. the entire replacement
    cost.
  • Repair/Replacement Mean Damage Ratio (MDR)
  • Local construction and cost data, production
    material, demolition and debris removal,
    lifeline, government law and social data are
    needed!


9
10
Direct Social Loss Conversion
  • This includes both empirical and analytical
    social death, injury and homeless, evacuated,
    affected population ratios for conversion from
    building damage estimates.
  • Much uncertainty development level!
  • Given the damage levels, occupancy data is
    required per building given a certain time of
    day.
  • It is also important to identify large social
    loss areas, like marketplaces, schools and
    stadiums.


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Direct Social Loss Conversion
  • KOERI (2002) give deaths as the number of
    severely damaged (D4) and collapsed (D5)
    buildings.
  • An expert opinion system gave serious injuries as
    4x deaths.
  • There are many empirical casualty rate models.
  • Region-specific usually.

Spence, 2007
Jaiswal et al., 2009

11
12
Indirect Socio-Economic Loss Conversion
  • Modelling indirect effects is difficult due to
    lack of data and complexity of relationships
    between indirect and direct effects!
  • Two types hazard dependent and hazard
    independent.


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Earthquake Loss Consequences
Outputs of earthquake loss estimation
Adapted from SYNERG, 2009

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Earthquake Loss Assessment for mediation and
mitigation

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Using the earthquake cycle to protect against
Earthquakes and Secondary Hazards

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Earthquake Loss Estimation Tools
  • Many tools that can be used depending on the
    desired model, use and data availability
  • open source or proprietary
  • for real-time monitoring
  • complex or simple
  • empirical or analytical
  • Some example of non-proprietary tools
  • HAZUS-MH (North America) scenario risk analysis
    for hurricane, earthquake and floods.
  • CAPRA (Central America) probabilistic risk
    analysis to the analysis of hurricane,
    earthquake, volcano, flood, tsunami and landslide
    hazards.
  • RADIUS excel-based tool for preliminary
    estimation of damage in developing countries
  • GEM currently being developed as the first
    global earthquake model


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