1 / 23

Small Sea Changes: Big Infrastructure Impacts

Small Sea Changes: Big Infrastructure Impacts. The Gulf Coast Study Mike Savonis, US DOT November 13, 2009. Gulf Coast Study Team. United States Department of Transportation (lead agency) United States Geological Survey (supporting agency) Cambridge Systematics, Inc.

Télécharger la présentation

Small Sea Changes: Big Infrastructure Impacts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Small Sea Changes: Big Infrastructure Impacts • The Gulf Coast Study • Mike Savonis, US DOT • November 13, 2009

  2. Gulf Coast Study Team United States Department of Transportation (lead agency) United States Geological Survey (supporting agency) Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Texas A&M University University of New Orleans Louisiana State University Transportation Analysis Team Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Texas Transportation Institute Wilbur Smith Associates 2

  3. Federal Advisory CommitteeGulf Coast Study 3

  4. Global Climate Change Impacts in the USAuthor Team • Co-Chairs: Tom Karl, NOAA; Jerry Melillo, Marine Biological Laboratory; Tom Peterson, NOAA

  5. Transportation Timeframes vs. Climate Impacts Climate Impacts Engineering and Design Construction In Service Service Life Transportation Planning Process ProjectConcept AdoptedLong-Range Plan 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Years

  6. Results – Gulf Coast StudyTrends in Climate and the Natural Environment Historical rate of sea level rise relative to the land surface varied among tide gauges across the region 2.14 mm/yr 9.85 mm/yr 6.5 mm/yr 6

  7. Land Surface Elevations Subject to Flooding in the Study Area under High, Mid, and Low Sea Level rise Scenarios (Ensemble of 7 GCMs under Four Emission Scenarios) (SLRRP Model results in centimeters) 7

  8. Caveats – Relative SLR and Storm Surge Analysis of impacts is based on land elevation rather than the height of facilities Analysis does not consider the presence of possible protective structures (levees, sea walls, etc.) Given the connectivity of the intermodal system, a small flooded segment may render much of the infrastructure inoperable 8

  9. Results – Gulf Coast StudyTrends in Climate and the Natural Environment Average temperature is likely to increase by 2°- 4° F More hot days: # of days > 90 °F may increase by 50% Extreme daily high temps will also increase Models show mixed results for changes in average precipitation Intensity of rainfall events, however, will likely increase The magnitude of impacts worsen as emissions increase under the IPCC scenarios 9

  10. More intense downpours will increase transportation disruptions Heavy downpours have already increase The heaviest 1% of events has increased by 20% Increased flooding of roadways, rail lines and other transportation facilities is expected from overloaded drainage systems Changes in silt and debris buildup will affect channel depth at ports and increase dredging costs More flights are likely to be delayed and/or cancelled 10

  11. Sea-level rise will increase the risk of permanent flooding in coastal areas • Relative sea level rise of 4 feet in the Gulf Coast could permanently flood: • 24% of interstate miles, 28% of arterial miles, New Orleans Transit • More than 2,400 miles of roadway are at risk of permanent flooding • 72% of freight / 73% of non-freight facilities at ports • 9% of the rail miles operated, 20% of the freight facilities, no passenger stations • 3 airports

  12. Results – Gulf Coast StudyHighways Vulnerable to Relative Sea Level Rise Baseline (Present Day) 4 Feet of Sea Level Rise Source: Cambridge Systematics analysis of U.S. DOT Data.

  13. More intense storms will result in damaging storm surges • Transportation in vulnerable areas are already subject to large hurricanes; damages will increase as intensity increases • Temporary flooding of roads, airports, transit, ports and rail • Damages due to wave action, debris • Increased use of evacuation routes and rescue operations

  14. Results – Gulf Coast StudyVulnerability Due to…Storm Surge Transportation infrastructure that is vulnerable to 18 feet of storm surge includes: 51% of interstate miles, 56% of arterial miles, and most transit authorities 98% of port facilities vulnerable to surge and 100% to wind 33% of rail miles operated, 43% of freight facilities 22 airports in the study area at or below 18 feet MSL 14

  15. Freight Rail Lines Vulnerable to Storm Surge of 18 feet Source: Cambridge Systematics analysis of climate projections and Federal Railroad Administration data.

  16. Hurricane Katrina Damage to Highway 90 at Bay St. Louis, MS Source: NASA Remote Sensing Tutorial.

  17. Increases in extreme heat will limit some operations and damage roads and rail Changes in maintenance and construction practices Rise in rail buckling Impacts to aircraft performance and runway length Increased use of energy for refrigerated storage Number of Days Over 100ºF Recent Past, 1961-1979 Higher Emissions Scenario, 2080-2099

  18. Preparing for change… Robust transportation systems – reliability under a range of conditions Use of new approaches to decision-making Scenario planning Probabilistic rather than deterministic approach Risk assessment approach Planning horizons (20 years) are not well-suited to the assessment of climate change impacts 18

  19. LessonsChanges in demand for transportation services Infrastructure will follow demand Flooding of urban and rural settlements Agricultural products

  20. LessonsRolling adaptive processes, not a quick fix Appropriate, pre-emptive actions will be less costly. Climate uncertainty makes monitoring essential. Risk Assessment AdaptationResponse GreaterResilience 20

  21. LessonsPlanning for retirement Rebuild or retreat? Time & Uncertainty New Tools Risk Management Engineering Economy

  22. For More Information “The Potential Impacts of Climate Change and Variability on Transportation Systems and Infrastructure – The Gulf Coast Study, Phase I” Synthesis and Assessment Product 4.7 http://www.globalchange.gov/publications/reports/scientific-assessments/saps/sap4-7 “Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States” http://www.globalchange.gov/publications/reports/scientific-assessments/us-impacts 22

More Related