Authors / CoAuthors
Richter, H. | Arthur, W.C. | Krause, C. | Schroeter, S. | Wehner, M. | Ebert, B. | Dunford, M.A. | Kepert, J. | Hay, R.J. | Sexton, M.J. | Edwards, M.R.
Abstract
Strong surface wind gusts and heavy rain are meteorological hazards that are predominantly produced by storms such as east coast lows, tropical cyclones or thunderstorms. Interest in these hazards from a response agency point of view lies in their impact on the natural and built environment. At present, weather forecast models still predict mostly 'raw' meteorological output such as surface wind speeds at certain times, or rain accumulations over a specified period. This model output needs to be combined with exposure and vulnerability information to translate the forecast hazard into predicted impact. The Bushfire and Natural Hazards CRC project Impact-based forecasting for the coastal zone: East-Coast Lows attempts to demonstrate a pilot capability to deliver impact forecasts for residential housing from an ensemble of weather prediction models runs. The project is a collaborative effort between the Australian Bureau of Meteorology and Geoscience Australia. The project is initially focusing on the wind and rainfall impact from the 20-22 April 2015 east coast low event in NSW. The wind and rainfall hazard data are provided by a 24-member ensemble of the ACCESS model on a 1.3 km grid, with damage data acquired from NSW State Emergency Services (SES) and the Emergency Information Coordination Unit (EICU) for the 2015 event. We will show that the multi-hazard nature of an east coast low event makes attributing the observed building damage to a single hazard difficult. Wind damage to residential housing in this case is largely due to tree fall. This 'damage-by-intermediary' mechanism requires not just the knowledge of building properties in an exposed area, but also additional knowledge of the surrounding vegetation and its response to strong winds. We will discuss enhancements to the SES/EICU damage survey templates that would lead to improvements in the development of the hazard-damage relationships. Abstract presented at the 2018 Bushfire and Natural Hazards CRC (bnhcrc) and Australasian Fire And Emergency Services Authorities Council (AFAC) Conference
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document
eCat Id
129530
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Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
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- theme.ANZRC Fields of Research.rdf
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- EARTH SCIENCES
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- Disaster
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- Impact
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- Forecasting
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- Published_External
Publication Date
2024-10-04T06:52:43
Creation Date
2018-02-16T00:00:00
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completed
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Abstract presented at the 2018 AFAC Conference
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asNeeded
Topic Category
climatologyMeteorologyAtmosphere
Series Information
Bushfire and Natural Hazards CRC & AFAC conference Perth, 5 – 8 September 2018
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Abstract submitted for the AFAC 2018 Conference. Prepared by Harald Richter (Bureau of Meteorology), with GA as co-authors
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[-44.00, -9.00, 154.00, 112.00]
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