California Geological Survey – “Probabilistic Tsunami Modeling and Public Pol...
Post–Real Time Post-Earthquake Impact Assessment and Response Prioritization - David Wald
1. David Wald
U.S. Geological Survey
Golden, Colorado
Kuo-Wan Lin & Kishor Jaiswal
U.S. Geological Survey
Loren Turner
Caltrans, Sacramento
USGS National Earthquake
Information Center,
Golden, Colorado
Post–Real Time Post-Earthquake Impact
Assessment and Response Prioritization
2. In-situ monitoring: full-blown, smart sensors
Ground-truthing: expert; aggregated media/social media
Remote sensing: image processed (or crowd-sourced)
Estimating: e.g., ShakeMap ShakeCast/PAGER/HAZUS
Combinating of all of the above!
Post-Earthquake Assessment Strategies
3. In-situ monitoring: full-blown, smart sensors
Ground-truthing: expert; aggregated media/social media
Remote sensing: image processed (or crowd-sourced)
Estimating: e.g., ShakeMap ShakeCast/PAGER/HAZUS
Combining of all of the above!
Post-Earthquake Assessment Strategies
Multichannel (e.g., USGS@VA Hospitals); wireless, MEMS sensor, GPS, strain meters
Radar Interferometry (image changes; ARIA/Sang-ho Yun, this meeting); imagery (Geo-Can/Haiti)
911; news & social media aggregators, DYFI?, disaster forensics (CEDIM), LFE/GEER & others’ recon
Fast, automatic, ubiquitous.
Rapid; high-quality, research grade, but expensive, state-of-health tools & deployment of sensors limited
Latency is an issue; highly variable. High resolution, but quality of interpretation limited but improving.
Snap-shots. Incomplete or long latency. Quality & scope of aggregated data maybe insufficient.
Approximate. Limited by lack of recordings & info on structure, vulnerability, demographic data.
4. PAGER (Prompt Assessment of
Global Earthquakes for Response)
ShakeMap“Did You Feel It?”
ShakeCast
7. 2010 M7.0 Haiti
2010 M8.8 Chile
UCB – Unreinforced concrete block
masonry & low rise non-ductile
concrete frame
W or INF – Light timber or steel frame
(informal/makeshift type)
M – Mud wall construction
RM & RM2L – Reinforced masonry
(commonly low-rise) and masonry
with frames (dual)
RS – Rubble stone masonry (hybrid)
S2 – Steel frame
A – Adobe block
PAGER estimates of buildings contributing to casualties
Note: color scheme applies to different buildings for Chile & Haiti
K. Jaiswal & EERI/WHE (2013)
8. ShakeCast & Critical Infrastructure
EERI Annual Meeting
Technology for Post-Earthquake Assessment & Monitoring
ShakeCast at Caltrans
14. CommunicationLayer
ApplicationAPI
Data Analysis API
User IT Infrastructure
ShakeCast
Plugin Plugin Plugin
User FragilityFacility
User Interface
Third-Party
Programs
(ROVER, Marconi)
ShakeMap and
Other Earthquake
Products
ShakeCast
Notifications
ShakeCast Version 3 System Diagram
19. Default or User Defined
Damage States
Fragility information in look-up tables
that contain discrete ground-motion
thresholds between damage states
HAZUS high-code model
building types
Can be based on:
• Peak ground acceleration (PGA)
• Peak ground velocity (PGV)
• Spectral response at 0.3, 1, 3 sec.
• Intensity (MMI)
21. CommunicationLayer
ApplicationAPI
Data Analysis API
User IT Infrastructure
ShakeCast
Plugin Plugin Plugin
User FragilityFacility
User Interface
Third-Party
Programs
(ROVER, Marconi)
ShakeMap and
Other Earthquake
Products
ShakeCast
Notifications
22. ShakeCast Probabilistic Fragility Analysis
Damage Function Probabilistic Fragility Analysis
The probability of each structural damage state for a
given facility is expressed as a function of IM:
ds = 0
1 <= ds <= n-1
ds = n
where
is the probability of structural
damage state ds for a given IM.
Facility damage functions are in the form of lognormal
fragility curves that relates the probability of being in,
or exceeding, a damage state for a given intensity
measure parameter. The probability that structural
damage reaches or exceeds a specific damage state, ds,
for a given intensity measure, IM, is approximated as a
cumulative lognormal distribution function:
Damage State Probability
Accounting Data Variability
Best Estimate Damage Levels for Rapid Notification
dsds
IM
IMdsP
ln
1
]|[
where
is the median value of input intensity measure
at which the structure reaches the threshold of the
damage state ds,
is the standard deviation of nature logarithm for
the damage state ds, and
is standard cumulative lognormal distribution
function.
ds
ds
IM
x dximxfxIMdsDSPIMdsDSP ),;(]|[]|[
where
is the probability density function of
intensity measure im and
is the uncertainty for intensity measure im.
),( imfim
]|0[1]|[ IMDSPIMdsDSP
]|1[]|[ IMdsDSPIMdsDSP
]|[ IMnDSP
]|[ IMdsDSP
The figure at the bottom is an example showing the
output plot of full fragility analysis for a Caltrans bridge
using a M7.2 San Andreas ShakeMap scenario. In this
example there were three fragility curves defined for the
bridge that represent inspection priority: low (filled green
curve), medium (filled yellow curve), and high (filled red
curve). Thus a total of four damage state probability
estimates were produced (histogram) as a result; high
inspection priority is the state of highest probability.
ShakeCast statistical fragility analysis plot
Probability Distribution
for the Input Motion
Input Motion
Lin & Wald (2012) 15WCEE
23. Caltrans Advanced Bridge Fragility in ShakeCast
Caltrans Generation 2 Fragility (g2F)
Slide courtesy of L. Turner, Caltrans
HAZUS – System Level
Fragility (ShakeCast v2)g2F – System Level
Fragility (ShakeCast v3)
Columns
Seats
Restrainers
BearingsJoints
Approach
24. Implementation of Probabilistic
Fragility Analysis
• Implement full
statistical interpretation
of fragility curves.
• Implement a
component-based
fragility analysis
framework.
• Provide summary for
inspection priority for
key components.
25. CommunicationLayer
ApplicationAPI
Data Analysis API
User IT Infrastructure
ShakeCast
Plugin Plugin Plugin
User FragilityFacility
User Interface
Third-Party
Programs
(ROVER, Marconi)
ShakeMap and
Other Earthquake
Products
ShakeCast
Notifications
26. Rule-based
Fragility Criteria
Predefined rule set determining the level
of concern that ties directly with the
users’ post-earthquake response protocol
Nuclear ShakeCast Regulatory Criteria (USNRC & IAEA)
Regulatory Level “worker”
• SL1/OBE Exceedance
• SL2/SSE Exceedance
• RG 1.166A Exceedance
• Magnitude (>5.0) & Distance
(<200KM) Check
• Felt (M>6.0 & MMI II) Check
• Felt on Site (MMI IV) Check
Plugin
27. CommunicationLayer
ApplicationAPI
Data Analysis API
User IT Infrastructure
ShakeCast
Plugin Plugin Plugin
User FragilityFacility
User Interface
Third-Party
Programs
(ROVER, Marconi)
ShakeMap and
Other Earthquake
Products
ShakeCast
Notifications
28. ShakeMap Atlas
• All available data (ground
motion, intensity, fault)
• Site conditions from
topographic-slope proxy
• Standard ShakeMap
approach to combine
observed, estimated
shaking
• Uses other than PAGER:
GEM, loss estimation,
secondary hazards,
insurance, mitigation,
response planning, …
ShakeMap Atlas 2.0:
>10,000 Earthquakes
[1973 – 2011]
29. 10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
1010
10
10
10
20
2020
20 30
30
30
40 40
40
40
50
60
70
80
Secondary Hazards:
Landslides
Liquefaction
USGS Peak Accel. Map (in %g) : Northridge, California
JAN 17 1994 12:30:55 AM GMT M 6.7 N34.21 W118.54 Depth: 19.0km ID:199401171230
Map Version 1 Processed Fri Jun 15, 2012 02:39:00 PM MDT
INSTRUMENTAL
INTENSITY
PEAK ACC.(%g)
I II−III IV V VI VII VIII IX X+
<0.05 0.3 2.8 6.2 12 22 40 75 >139
Scale based upon Worden et al. (2011)
−119˚ −118˚
33.5˚
34˚
34.5˚
35˚
0 50
km
35. Liquefaction
InSAR
LIDAR
Optical
GPS
Population
Landslides
Building
Damage or
Collapse
Distribution of high
Landslide likelihood
Fatality distribution
Distribution of high
Liquefaction likelihood
Peak Acceleration
Slope & Geology
Finite Fault
Vegetation?
Landslides?
Liquefaction?
Ground
deformation?
Collapse?
Inundation?
PAGERALERT
?
Strategy for Incorporating
Remotely-sensed imagery
into impact Assessment
REPAIR Project: USGS, JPL, & Caltech
36. • Low-cost instrument at user’s facility, maintained by
USGS,
• Data processed in real-time, parametric data go directly
into ShakeMap,
• ShakeCast damage
assessment site-specific, based on recordings at user’s
facility,
• User accessible
seismograph.
40
USGS NetQuakes
38. CommunicationLayer
ApplicationAPI
Data Analysis API
User IT Infrastructure
ShakeCast
Plugin Plugin Plugin
User FragilityFacility
User Interface
Third-Party
Programs
(ROVER, Marconi)
ShakeMap and
Other Earthquake
Products
ShakeCast
Notifications
Independent
Sensors &
Ground Motion
recordings
42. NRC
ShakeCast: Example Critical Users
California Department of Transportation
Coverage: California (Uses CISN’s NC & SC ShakeMap)
Facilties: ~20,000 overpasses & bridges statewide
Fragilites: SA(T), HAZUS capacity-spectrum approach based on very
detailed NBI inventory + Caltrans specifications.
Usage: Bridge inspection priority after earthquakes. >300 users
within Caltrans.
Status: Fully Operational
Contact: Loren Turner, PE, Senior Bridge Engineer, Sacramento.
43. Integrated into Caltran response protocols.
Over 300 current subscribers to ShakeCast:
◦ Structure Maintenance & Investigations inspectors (SM&I)
◦ Earthquake Engineering staff & managers
◦ Members of the Post EQ Investigations Team (PEQIT)
◦ Structures Construction inspectors & managers
◦ Geotechnical Services staff and managers
◦ District Traffic Management Center (TMC) managers & staff
◦ District Emergency Operations Center (EOC) managers
◦ Caltrans Upper Management, including the Director & some
Deputy Directors
Slide courtesy of L. Turner, Caltrans
44. ShakeCast identified the
only bridge damaged in
this event as the top
priority for inspection.
Slide courtesy of L. Turner, Caltrans
46. Coverage: LAUSD (City of LA: LA Basin/SF/SG Valleys)
Facilities: 1096 Schools/Office locations monitored
Fragilities: MMI, working on building-specific HAZUS types
Usage: Generate priority list for initial support & inspection; prioritize
possible schools that can receive displaced students; clarify
locations for Red Cross Shelters.
Status: Operational; remotely served by Amazon cloud service
Contact: Bob Spears, Director Office of Emergency Services
Los Angeles Unified School District
ShakeCast: Example Critical Users
[LAUSD serves 740,000 students; 80,000 employees, $7B annual
budget, serves 500,000 lunches per day!]
47. East Bay Metropolitan Utility District (EBMUD)
ShakeCast: Example Critical Users
Use Sector: Critical Lifeline Utility, Government
Coverage: San Francisco East Bay Area
Facilities: hundreds of dams, pipelines,
control bldgs., facility structures
Fragilities: Custom
Usage: Situational awareness
Status: Operational
Contact: Xavier Arias,
Dir. Engineering & Construction
EBMUD
Pipelines (blue)
48. Walmart
ShakeCast: Example Critical Users
Use Sector: Private sector, Commerce, Transportation
Coverage: Domestic & global
Facilities: 4,200+ retail outlets, 148 dist. centers, 50 corp. facilties,
1.6+ million assoc. in 50 states; as many more globally
Fragilities: Intensity-based
Usage: Situational awareness for Walmart EO/headquarters;
“Taking care of our people, operations, communities”
Status: Operational
Contact: Lucas McDonald, Emergency Operations Manager
49. 3
Where We Operate
United States
•1.6+ Million associates in 50 States
•4,200+ Retail Outlets
•148 Distribution Centers
•50+ Corporate Facilities
Slide courtesy of L. McDonald, Walmart
50. Degenkolb
ShakeCast: Example Critical Users
Use Sector: Private, Engineering
Coverage: Hospitals, various engineered structures
Facilities: Hospitals, engineered structures; portfolios
Fragilities: SA(T); HAZUS (capacity spectrum); custom
Usage: Post earthquake evaluation, inspection,
priorities, as a customer service
Status: Operational & development
Contact: M. Hachem, Associate Principal
51. – In-situ monitoring: full-blown & smart sensor
– Remote sensing: image processed (or crowd-sourced)
– Ground-truth: expert; aggregated media/social media
– Recorded/modeled: e.g., ShakeMap ShakeCast/PAGER
– A combination of all of the above!
Post-Earthquake Assessment Strategies
54. • Software:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/shakecast/
• ShakeCast Help Line
Shakecast-help@usgs.gov
• ShakeCast Community Support Mailing List
https://geohazards.usgs.gov/mailman/listinfo/shakecast-
users
• ShakeCast Wiki
https://my.usgs.gov/ShakeCastWiki/
58
ShakeCast Documents/Support
55. Acknowledgments
ShakeMap
• R&D, software support by Bruce Worden (Pasadena)
• Operations, support & development by Kuo-Wan Lin
• Operations of ShakeMap by NEIC, CISN, & other ANSS
regional networks: USGS, CIT, BKS, UW, UU, UNR, UM, UAF, …)
ShakeCast
• Development by Kuo-wan Lin, w/ Travis LaWall, Ft. Collins, CO.
• User support by Travis LaWall
• Loren Turner (& Cliff Roblee), Trans. Engineers, Caltrans
• Annie Kammerer, USNRC
PAGER
• Kishor Jaiswal (USGS/NEIC), Engineering/Loss Model Development
• Programming & support, Mike Hearne, Kristin Marano, USGS
Editor's Notes
SHAKEMAP IS BASIC INPUTSHAKECAST FOR SITE-SPECIFIC estimates of loss/inspection priority at a PORTFOLIO of facilities/buildings& PAGER FOR GLOBAL VIEW (Literally and figurative)
For example, we are working on producing charts of which structure are likely to dominate response and recovery, and which culprit buildings will be the source of fatalities & USAR.We are currently working with funding from USAID to provide USAR what they need in terms of structural information. We are working with USAID/OFDA and the LA/Fairfax teams to improve this product.So here we are going to need more building-specific information.
ShakeCast is intended more for major utilities and companies, Like Caltrans who have major exposure and need to prioritize response. ShakeCast runs completely in the background, automatically, downloads the ShakeMap, computes the shaking and likelihood of damage at the users’ facilities and sends out notifications to the users response team.
Predictor variables, Explanatory variables.
Predictor variables, Explanatory variables.
In the grand scheme of things, integrating independent smart-sensor, facility specific data is possible with ShakeCast, but we’ve kept it rather simple due to the scope of the problem.SC can take independent SGM data and treat those observations as better quality than a ShakeMap, but as an entity providing ShakeMap, it’s even more beneficial if site observations are also incorporated into ShakeMap for the greater good. It’s also easier to set the standards and data flow this way.
Oakland, CA, ShakeCast Workshop
Doug Wilson, Senior Facilities Engineer, Snohomish County Public Utility District
Integrated means, documented and institualionalized in the post-earthquake response environment.
Walmart is basically one of the worlds most impressive trucking/shipping companies.
Walmart is basically one of the worlds most impressive distribution companies.
Primary funding from USGS and these sponsors. Caltrans has been fundamentally generous in promoting the openness of the development made with their funds and use of ShakeCast by any interested partners.