Choosing a rockfall barrier with the Precautionary Principle: a quantitative approach |
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Authors: | Enrico Cameron G F Peloso |
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Institution: | 1.GeoStudio,Morbegno,Italy;2.Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra,Università degli Studi di Pavia,Pavia,Italy |
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Abstract: | The paper illustrates an approach for implementing the Precautionary Principle in risk management, exemplified by a procedure
aimed at choosing the height of a rockfall barrier protecting a railway stretch. Risk is expressed by the frequency f of blocks hitting the railway—i.e. by the ratio between the number of blocks reaching the railway and the number of blocks
falling from the slope—assessed through software simulation of the falling of the blocks. The height from which a block may
fall is considered to be the main uncertainty factor in risk estimation, which translates into uncertainty as to the level
of risk, as every simulation shows that more than one impact frequency is possible. Such uncertainty justifies the precautionary
approach to the design of the barrier, and is represented mathematically by means of possibility and probability distribution
functions. The distributions make it possible to express the degree of precaution related to a barrier as the level of confidence,
in terms of necessity or probability measures—that can be placed on the fact that, because of the barrier, the impact frequency,
although uncertain, will not exceed what is acceptable. It will be shown that the degree of precaution takes quite different
values if possibility theory is used instead of probability theory. Finally some simple cost/benefit analyses, that explicitly
and quantitatively consider the degree of precaution, are exemplified. |
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