Transcript
Page 1: NIST Community Resilience Program

NIST Community Resilience Program

Society of American Military Engineers, Washington, DC Post

August 21, 2014Stephen A. CauffmanLead, Disaster ResilienceMaterials and Structural Systems DivisionEngineering Laboratory

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What is the Problem?

• Natural and man-made disasters cause an estimated $57B in average annual costs.

• Superstorm Sandy caused over $65B in losses.

• Large single events can cause losses exceeding $100B.

• Current approach of response and rebuilding is impractical and inefficient for dealing with natural disasters.

• Planning does not account for interconnected nature of buildings and infrastructure, nor for the affect on social institutions.

• Changing nature of hazards is not always considered.

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What is Disaster Resilience?

• The term "resilience" means the ability to prepare for and adapt to changing conditions and withstand and recover rapidly from disruptions*

• In the context of community resilience, the emphasis is not solely on mitigating risk, but implementing measures to ensure that the community recovers to normal, or near normal function, in a reasonable timeframe.

*As defined in Presidential Policy Directive 21.

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Community Needs Drive Functional Requirements for Buildings and Infrastructure

FunctionalRequirements

Business

GovernmentCitizens

Industry

TransportationEnergy

Structures

Water

Communications

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Community Resilience for the Built Environment

• Performance Goals

• Mitigation• Response • Recovery

• Natural hazards

• Manmade hazards

• Degradation

• Climate change

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NIST Community Resilience Program

NIST is:

• Convening the highly diverse stakeholder interests to:

– Develop the first version of a comprehensive Disaster Resilience Framework for achieving community resilience that considers the interdependence of the community's physical and human assets, operations, and policies/regulations

– Establish a Disaster Resilience Standards Panel to further develop the Disaster Resilience Framework (version 2.0) and,

– Develop Model Resilience Guidelines for critical buildings and infrastructure systems essential to community resilience based on model standards, codes, and best practices

• It is envisioned that the Disaster Resilience Standards Panel will update the framework and guidance on a regular basis and recommend improvements that enhance resilience to standards and codes.

• The Disaster Resilience Framework Version 1.0, formation of the Disaster Resilience Standards Panel, and Model Resilience Guidelines are called out in the President’s Climate Action Plan

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Stakeholder Engagement is Critical

• Stakeholders include, but are not limited to:

– Codes and standards organizations

– State, local, and regional officials

– Insurance/re-insurance industry

– Architects

– Engineers

– Utility operators

– Urban planners

– Industry

– Emergency managers

– Relief organizations

– Regulators

– Academia

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Federal Stakeholders• Federal stakeholders include, but are not limited to:

– Executive Office of the President (National Security Staff, OSTP, NSTC)

– Department of Homeland Security

– Department of Commerce

– Department of Defense

– Environmental Protection Agency

– U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

– Department of Energy

– Department of Health and Human Services

– Department of Housing and Urban Development

– Department of Transportation

– U.S. Geological Survey

– National Science Foundation

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Disaster Resilience Framework 1.0

• The Disaster Resilience Framework 1.0 will focus on the role that buildings and infrastructure lifelines play in ensuring community resilience.

• The Framework will:

– Establish types of performance goals and ways to express them

– Identify existing standards, codes, and best practices that address resilience

– Identify gaps that must be addressed to enhance resilience

– Capture regional differences in perspectives on resilience

• The Disaster Resilience Framework will be informed through a series of stakeholder workshops.

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Disaster Resilience Standards Panel

• The DRSP will represent the broad interests of the stakeholder community.

• The DRSP will be:

– open to all interested participants

– a self-governing entity

• The DRSP will lead development of:

– Disaster Resilience Framework 2.0

– Model Resilience Guidelines

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Workshop Plan

• First workshop held April 7, 2014 and served to kick off the development of the Disaster Resilience Framework

• The second workshop was held in Hoboken, NJ on July 30. Breakout sessions focused on six chapters of the Framework.

• The next two workshops will feature working sessions to develop the Disaster Resilience Framework and lay the groundwork to establish the Disaster Resilience Standards Panel

• The April 2015 workshop will be organized around the release for public comment of the draft Disaster Resilience Framework and the formal establishment of the Disaster Resilience Standards Panel

• Participation in the workshops is open to all interested stakeholders

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Framework Development Process

July 2014 Workshop• 25% Draft

October 2014 Workshop• 50% Draft

January 2015 Workshop• 75% Draft

April 2015 Workshop• Release Draft

for Public Comment

Disaster Resilience Framework Version 1.0

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Disaster Resilience Fellows• The Disaster Resilience Fellows Program will augment expertise currently

existing on the NIST team in the following areas:

– State and local governance

– Urban planning

– Lifeline sectors (electric power, water/wastewater, transportation, communications)

– Insurance/Re-insurance

– Emergency planning and response

– Sociology of disasters

– Economic resilience

– Business continuity

• First year of program will support the development of the Disaster Resilience Framework

• Second year will support research component of the program

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Community Resilience R&D Community Resilience Assessment

• Develop first-generation tools to assess resilience at the community scale.

• Identify the systems (physical and social), attributes, and interdependencies that must be considered.

• Conduct pilot studies using the first-generation tool to inform development of community resilience models, identify gaps, and inform the development of a second-generation methodology.

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Community Resilience R&D Economic Analysis Tools

• Develop a first-generation economic analysis tools to facilitate cost-effective resource allocations that minimize the economic burden of disasters on communities.

• Develop draft standard practices and submit to ASTM.

• Economic Analysis tools, combined with the Resilience Assessment tools, will provide decision makers at the community/regional level a means to evaluate alternate investment decisions.

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Community Resilience R&DSystems Modeling

• Develop systems-based methods and models for assessing community resilience to provide the science basis for community resilience assessment and decision-support methodologies.

• Include the interdependencies among buildings, infrastructure, and the social systems that they support.

• Develop a conceptual model to explain long-term disaster recovery decisions by the public.

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Disaster Resilience Center of Excellence

• Enable collaborations between NIST and Leading Research Institutes in areas of emerging technology important for NIST.

• Provide new opportunities for training of students and postdocs in measurement science.

• Enhance technical innovation through early alignment of measurement science with emerging and innovative new fields of research

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Disaster Resilience Center of Excellence

• $4M/year program to be funded through a cooperative agreement.

• Objectives are to:

– Develop an integrated, multi-scale, computational modeling environment to accelerate development of systems-level models to enable new standards and tools for enhancing Community Resilience

– Foster the development of data architectures and data management tools to enable disaster resilience planning for emergency and decision-making officials, code and standards professionals, engineering design experts, and researchers.

– Conduct studies to validate resilience data architectures, data management tools, and models for a variety of hazard events including:

• Tornado, hurricane, earthquake, flood, Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI)

• Effects of climate change, and effects of aging infrastructure

• Federal Funding Opportunity closes 12 September 2014.

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NIST Contacts

Mr. Stephen Cauffman

Engineering Laboratory Lead for Disaster Resilience

E-Mail: [email protected]

Phone: 301-975-6051

Website: http://www.nist.gov/el/building_materials/resilience/

General E-mail: [email protected]


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