Abstract

Abstract. Evacuation of the population from a tsunami hazard zone is vital to reduce life-loss due to inundation. Geospatial least-cost distance modelling provides one approach to assessing tsunami evacuation potential. Previous models have generally used two static exposure scenarios and fixed travel speeds to represent population movement. Some analyses have assumed immediate departure or a common evacuation departure time for all exposed population. Here, a method is proposed to incorporate time-variable exposure, distributed travel speeds, and uncertain evacuation departure time into an existing anisotropic least-cost path distance framework. The method is demonstrated for hypothetical local-source tsunami evacuation in Napier City, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand. There is significant diurnal variation in pedestrian evacuation potential at the suburb level, although the total number of people unable to evacuate is stable across all scenarios. Whilst some fixed travel speeds approximate a distributed speed approach, others may overestimate evacuation potential. The impact of evacuation departure time is a significant contributor to total evacuation time. This method improves least-cost modelling of evacuation dynamics for evacuation planning, casualty modelling, and development of emergency response training scenarios. However, it requires detailed exposure data, which may preclude its use in many situations.

Highlights

  • Local-source tsunami can cause loss of life due to onshore inundation within minutes after a source event

  • The method is demonstrated for hypothetical local-source tsunami evacuation in Napier City, Hawke’s Bay, New Zealand

  • Least-cost distance (LCD) analysis is an established method for tsunami evacuation modelling (Graehl and Dengler, 2008; Post et al, 2009; Scheer et al, 2011; Wood and Schmidtlein, 2012, 2013; González-Riancho et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Local-source (or near-field) tsunami can cause loss of life due to onshore inundation within minutes after a source event. Prompt evacuation of the hazard zone maximises a person’s chance of surviving tsunami inundation. Least-cost distance (LCD) analysis is an established method for tsunami evacuation modelling (Graehl and Dengler, 2008; Post et al, 2009; Scheer et al, 2011; Wood and Schmidtlein, 2012, 2013; González-Riancho et al, 2013). LCD analysis is a Geographic Information System (GIS)-based method that computes the minimum cost of travel (generally expended energy or time) between specified source and destination cells in a raster domain (i.e. a cellbased grid). Travel time maps enable emergency managers to visualise spatial variation in evacuation time (Wood and Schmidtlein, 2012). Comparison of travel time to wave arrival in tsunami inundation scenarios enables identification of areas that cannot be evacuated

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