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Journal Article

Citation

Lee JY, Ellingwood BR. Reliab. Eng. Syst. Safety 2017; 159: 100-107.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ress.2016.10.022

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Public awareness of civil infrastructure performance has increased considerably in recent years as a result of repeated natural disasters. Risks from natural hazards may increase dramatically in the future, given current patterns of urbanization and population growth in hazard-prone areas. Risk assessments for infrastructure with expected service periods of a century or more are highly uncertain, and there is compelling evidence that climatology will evolve over such intervals. Thus, current natural hazard and risk assessment models, which are based on a presumption of stationarity in hazard occurrence and intensity, may not be adequate to assess the potential risks from hazards occurring in the distant future. This paper addresses two significant intergenerational elements - the potential impact of non-stationarity in hazard due to climate change and intergenerational discounting practices - that are essential to provide an improved decision support framework that accommodates the needs and values of future generations. The framework so developed is tested through two benchmark problems involving buildings exposed to hurricanes.


Language: en

Keywords

Civil infrastructure; Climate change; Discounting; Engineering decision analysis; Hurricanes; Reliability; Structural engineering

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