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Earthquakes - Risk, Detection, Warning, and Research (Paperback)
Loot Price: R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
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Earthquakes - Risk, Detection, Warning, and Research (Paperback)
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Loot Price R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R384
Discovery Miles: 3 840
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The United States faces the possibility of large economic losses
from earthquake-damaged buildings and infrastructure. The Federal
Emergency Management Agency has estimated that earthquakes cost the
United States, on average, over $5 billion per year. California,
Oregon, and Washington account for nearly $4.1 billion (77%) of the
U.S. total estimated average annualized loss. California alone
accounts for most of the estimated annualized earthquake losses for
the nation. A single large earthquake, however, can cause far more
damage than the average annual estimate. The 1994 Northridge (CA)
earthquake caused as much as $26 billion (in 2005 dollars) in
damage and was one of the costliest natural disasters to strike the
United States. One study of the damage caused by a hypothetical
magnitude 7.8 earthquake along the San Andreas Fault in southern
California projected as many as 1,800 fatalities and more than $200
billion in economic losses. An issue for the 112th Congress is
whether existing federally supported programs aimed at reducing
U.S. vulnerability to earthquakes are an adequate response to the
earthquake hazard. Under the National Earthquake Hazards Reduction
Program (NEHRP), four federal agencies have responsibility for
long-term earthquake risk reduction: the U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS), the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST). They variously assess U.S.
earthquake hazards, deliver notifications of seismic events,
develop measures to reduce earthquake hazards, and conduct research
to help reduce overall U.S. vulnerability to earthquakes.
Congressional oversight of the NEHRP program might revisit how well
the four agencies coordinate their activities to address the
earthquake hazard. Better coordination was a concern that led to
changes to the program in legislation enacted in 2004 (P.L.
108-360). P.L. 108-360 authorized appropriations for NEHRP through
FY2009. Total funding enacted from reauthorization through FY2009
was $613.2 million, approximately 68% of the total amount of $902.4
million authorized by P.L. 108-360. Congress appropriated $131.2
million for NEHRP in FY2010, similar to FY2009 funding levels.
Also, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA; P.L. 111-5)
provided some additional funding for earthquake activities under
NEHRP. What effect funding at the levels enacted through FY2010
under NEHRP has had on the U.S. capability to detect earthquakes
and minimize losses after an earthquake occurs is difficult to
assess. The effectiveness of the NEHRP program is a perennial issue
for Congress: it is inherently difficult to capture precisely, in
terms of dollars saved or fatalities prevented, the effectiveness
of mitigation measures taken before an earthquake occurs. A major
earthquake in a populated urban area within the United States would
cause damage, and a question becomes how much damage would be
prevented by mitigation strategies underpinned by the NEHRP
program. Legislation was introduced during the 111th Congress (H.R.
3820) that would have made changes to the program and would have
authorized appropriations totaling $906 million over five years for
NEHRP. Ninety percent of the funding would have been designated for
the USGS and NSF, and the remainder for FEMA and NIST. The bill
passed the House but not the Senate. Similar legislation will
likely be introduced in the 112th Congress.
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