NIST Community Resilience Program
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Transcript NIST Community Resilience Program
Society of American
Military Engineers,
Washington, DC Post
NIST Community
Resilience Program
August 21, 2014
Stephen A. Cauffman
Lead, Disaster Resilience
Materials and Structural Systems Division
Engineering Laboratory
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.
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.
Community Needs Drive Functional
Requirements for Buildings and
Infrastructure
Citizens
Energy
Government
Transportation
Functional
Requirements
Communications
Business
Industry
Structures
Water
Community Resilience for the Built Environment
• Natural
hazards
• Manmade
hazards
• Degradation
• Climate
change
• Performance
Goals
• Mitigation
• Response
• Recovery
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
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
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
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.
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
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
Framework Development Process
Disaster
Resilience
Framework
Version 1.0
January 2015
Workshop
October 2014 • 75% Draft
Workshop
• 50% Draft
July 2014
Workshop
• 25% Draft
April 2015
Workshop
• Release Draft
for Public
Comment
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
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.
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.
Community Resilience R&D
Systems 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 longterm disaster recovery decisions by the public.
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
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.
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]