Abstract
Abstract. Globalisation and interregional exchange of people, goods, and services has boosted the importance of and reliance on all kinds of transport networks. The linear structure of road networks is especially sensitive to natural hazards. In southern Norway, steep topography and extreme weather events promote frequent traffic disruption caused by debris flows. Topographic susceptibility and trigger frequency maps serve as input into a hazard appraisal at the scale of first-order catchments to quantify the impact of debris flows on the road network in terms of a failure likelihood of each link connecting two network vertices, e.g. road junctions. We compute total additional traffic loads as a function of traffic volume and excess distance, i.e. the extra length of an alternative path connecting two previously disrupted network vertices using a shortest-path algorithm. Our risk metric of link failure is the total additional annual traffic load, expressed as vehicle kilometres, because of debris-flow-related road closures. We present two scenarios demonstrating the impact of debris flows on the road network and quantify the associated path-failure likelihood between major cities in southern Norway. The scenarios indicate that major routes crossing the central and north-western part of the study area are associated with high link-failure risk. Yet options for detours on major routes are manifold and incur only little additional costs provided that drivers are sufficiently well informed about road closures. Our risk estimates may be of importance to road network managers and transport companies relying on speedy delivery of services and goods.
Highlights
Society’s reliance on transport networks has grown extensively, commensurately amplifying potentially adverse consequences of network malfunction (Taylor and D’Este, 2003; Demšar et al, 2008; Andrey, 2010)
We coupled graph theory with quantitative risk assessment to estimate the annual expected costs of detours arising from road closure by debris flows in southern Norway
A combination of topographic susceptibility and hydro-meteorological trigger frequency in first-order catchments formed the basis for assessing the likelihood of a given road link to fail following debris-flow impact
Summary
Society’s reliance on transport networks has grown extensively, commensurately amplifying potentially adverse consequences of network malfunction (Taylor and D’Este, 2003; Demšar et al, 2008; Andrey, 2010). Linear infrastructures such as road and rail networks, pipelines, and power grids are sensitive to catastrophic disruption (Schulz, 2007). Such network failure can be caused by, among others, vehicle accidents, construction work, natural hazards, and terrorism (Tacnet et al, 2012).
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