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Emergency planning and mitigation at Vesuvius: A new evidence-based approach
Authors:PJ Baxter  WP Aspinall  A Neri  G Zuccaro  RJS Spence  R Cioni  G Woo
Institution:1. Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Robinson Way, Cambridge CB2 2SR, UK;2. Aspinall & Associates, 5 Woodside Close, Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire HP9 1JQ, UK;3. Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia Sezione di Pisa Via della Faggiola 32, I-56126 Pisa, Italy;4. PLINIVS, LUPT Centre, University of Naples, Via Toledo 402, 80134, Naples, Italy;5. Department of Architecture, 1-5 Scroope Terrace, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1PX, UK;6. Dip. Scienza della Terra, Via Trentino 51, I-09127 Cagliari, Italy;g Risk Management Solutions, 30 Monument Street, London EC3R 8NB, UK
Abstract:Disasters from explosive volcanic eruptions are infrequent and experience in emergency planning and mitigation for such events remains limited. The need for urgently developing more robust methods for risk assessment and decision making in volcanic crises has become increasingly apparent as world populations continue to expand in areas of active explosive volcanism. Nowhere is this more challenging than at Vesuvius, Italy, with hundreds of thousands of people living on the flanks of one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world. We describe how a new paradigm, evidence-based volcanology, has been applied in EXPLORIS to contribute to crisis planning and management for when the volcano enters its next state of unrest, as well as in long-term land-use planning. The analytical approach we adopted enumerates and quantifies all the processes and effects of the eruptive hazards of the volcano known to influence risk, a scientific challenge that combines field data on the vulnerability of the built environment and humans in past volcanic disasters with theoretical research on the state of the volcano, and including evidence from the field on previous eruptions as well as numerical simulation modelling of eruptive processes. Formal probabilistic reasoning under uncertainty and a decision analysis approach have provided the basis for the development of an event tree for a future range of eruption types with probability paths and hypothetical casualty outcomes for risk assessment. The most likely future eruption scenarios for emergency planning were derived from the event tree and elaborated upon from the geological and historical record. Modelling the impacts in these scenarios and quantifying the consequences for the circumvesuvian area provide realistic assessments for disaster planning and for showing the potential risk–benefit of mitigation measures, the main one being timely evacuation, but include for consideration protecting buildings against dilute, low dynamic pressure surges, and temporary roof supports in the most vulnerable buildings, as well as hardening infrastructure and lifelines. This innovative work suggests that risk-based methods could have an important role in crisis management at cities on volcanoes and small volcanic islands.
Keywords:planning  emergency  volcano  eruption  mitigation
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