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The volume explains how risk and decision-making analytics can be
applied to the wicked problem of protecting infrastructure and
society from extreme events. There is increasing research that
takes into account the risks associated with the timing and
severity of extreme events in engineering to reduce the
vulnerability or increase the resiliency of infrastructure.
"Engineering for extremes" is defined as measures taken to reduce
the vulnerability or increase the resiliency of built
infrastructure to climate change, hurricanes, storms, floods,
earthquakes, heat waves, fires, and malevolent and abnormal events
that include terrorism, gas explosions, vehicle impact and vehicle
overload. The book introduces the key concepts needed to assess the
economic and social well-being risks, costs and benefits of
infrastructure to extreme events. This includes hazard modelling
(likelihood and severity), infrastructure vulnerability, resilience
or exposure (likelihood and extent of damage), social and economic
loss models, risk reduction from protective measures, and decision
theory (cost-benefit and utility analyses). Case studies authored
by experts from around the world describe the practical aspects of
risk assessment when deciding on the most cost-efficient measures
to reduce infrastructure vulnerability to extreme events for
housing, buildings, bridges, roads, tunnels, pipelines, and
electricity infrastructure in the developed and developing worlds.
The volume explains how risk and decision-making analytics can be
applied to the wicked problem of protecting infrastructure and
society from extreme events. There is increasing research that
takes into account the risks associated with the timing and
severity of extreme events in engineering to reduce the
vulnerability or increase the resiliency of infrastructure.
"Engineering for extremes" is defined as measures taken to reduce
the vulnerability or increase the resiliency of built
infrastructure to climate change, hurricanes, storms, floods,
earthquakes, heat waves, fires, and malevolent and abnormal events
that include terrorism, gas explosions, vehicle impact and vehicle
overload. The book introduces the key concepts needed to assess the
economic and social well-being risks, costs and benefits of
infrastructure to extreme events. This includes hazard modelling
(likelihood and severity), infrastructure vulnerability, resilience
or exposure (likelihood and extent of damage), social and economic
loss models, risk reduction from protective measures, and decision
theory (cost-benefit and utility analyses). Case studies authored
by experts from around the world describe the practical aspects of
risk assessment when deciding on the most cost-efficient measures
to reduce infrastructure vulnerability to extreme events for
housing, buildings, bridges, roads, tunnels, pipelines, and
electricity infrastructure in the developed and developing worlds.
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