scholarly journals Geospatial Environments for Hurricane Risk Assessment: Applications to Situational Awareness and Resilience Planning in New Jersey

Author(s):  
Tracy Kijewski-Correa ◽  
Alexandros Taflanidis ◽  
Charles Vardeman ◽  
James Sweet ◽  
Jize Zhang ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 133 ◽  
pp. 211-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tracy Kijewski-Correa ◽  
Nathan Smith ◽  
Alexandros Taflanidis ◽  
Andrew Kennedy ◽  
Cheng Liu ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 1327-1388 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Fernandes ◽  
F. Braunschweig ◽  
F. Lourenço ◽  
R. Neves

Abstract. The technological evolution in terms of computational capacity, data acquisition systems, numerical modelling and operational oceanography is supplying opportunities for designing and building holistic approaches and complex tools for newer and more efficient management (planning, prevention and response) of coastal water pollution risk events. A combined methodology to dynamically estimate time and space variable shoreline risk levels from ships has been developed, integrating numerical metocean forecasts and oil spill simulations with vessel tracking automatic identification systems (AIS). The risk rating combines the likelihood of an oil spill occurring from a vessel navigating in a study area – Portuguese Continental shelf – with the assessed consequences to the shoreline. The spill likelihood is based on dynamic marine weather conditions and statistical information from previous accidents. The shoreline consequences reflect the virtual spilled oil amount reaching shoreline and its environmental and socio-economic vulnerabilities. The oil reaching shoreline is quantified with an oil spill fate and behaviour model running multiple virtual spills from vessels along time. Shoreline risks can be computed in real-time or from previously obtained data. Results show the ability of the proposed methodology to estimate the risk properly sensitive to dynamic metocean conditions and to oil transport behaviour. The integration of meteo-oceanic + oil spill models with coastal vulnerability and AIS data in the quantification of risk enhances the maritime situational awareness and the decision support model, providing a more realistic approach in the assessment of shoreline impacts. The risk assessment from historical data can help finding typical risk patterns, "hot spots" or developing sensitivity analysis to specific conditions, whereas real time risk levels can be used in the prioritization of individual ships, geographical areas, strategic tug positioning and implementation of dynamic risk-based vessel traffic monitoring.


Author(s):  
Alexandros A. Taflanidis ◽  
Gaofeng Jia ◽  
Norberto C. Nadal-Caraballo ◽  
Andrew B. Kennedy ◽  
Jeffrey A. Melby ◽  
...  

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