Department of Geological Sciences, Faculty of Sciences Masaryk University/Brno & Czech Geological Society September 12-14, 2011 Short Course on Geological Hazards Day 3 (wed am), Lecture 5: (Topic 5 of Original Announcement) Klaus H. Jacob Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, NY jacob@ldeo.columbia.edu Overview of Topics • NYC's Expected Climate Change (21st Century) Temperature Precipitation Storms (Hurricanes, Nor'easter's, Winterstorms, Windstorms) Sea Level Rise (SLR) & Coastal Storm Surge Inundations • NYC's Infrastructure Exposed to the CC Hazards, and its Vulnerabilities. • Risk (Expected Future $-Losses) due to CC Options & Costs to Reduce NYC's CC Risks T/J3 Global Con Coastal urban agglomerations with populations more than 8 million in 2010 5Ww York* 17.2 Los Angeles •>3r9j|j Seoul • 9.9 Istanbul •118 Tianjin • 10.0 | ^,^.264 Karachi-16.6184 VVÄV™ ■ J Shanghai «13.7 ■ Calcutta*l5.6 £Manila* 13.9 Lagos-20.2 Mumoai.23.6 \T {- ^ Madras • 8.2 Bangkok M Rio de Janeiro • 11.5 Buenos Aires • _ f 13.7 X Source: UN data Climate Change in the U.S. Northeast 1900 1950 2000 2050 21 Oi No. ofdays>100°F (38°C) 80 ll c o C 8 H c 40- 0 a 20 1 V o NEW YORK Cll n Lower Emissions ■ Higher Emissions n M I— 1961-1990 2010-2039 2040-2069 2070-2C99 No. of days >90°F (32°C) 90 LL C o * 60-> 0 NEW YORK CITY □ Lower Emissions « 40 - ■ Higher Emissions > 3 n 10e--1G^D 201O-2C33 2D7C-20G9 CO o S ö) J2 <5 c > o < "S? !| E? a- 0 O > »- W CD — ■- O NO. OF DAYS WITH RAIN 1.5 - □ Lower Emissions ■ Higher Emissions 1 —I 0.5 -- o br >S cm 2010-2039 2040-2069 2070-2099 Many of these heavy rains occur during Nor'easters or Hurricanes WTC - Site: Questions: Can the West-Tub Flood? Can the East Tub Flood? For which Storm Surge Elevations? How will Flooding affect PATH System? • Hudson Tunnels • Stations / Tracks / Control Systems • New Transportation Hub? • For how Long ? Will Flooding of NYCT Subway System(s) Affect / Connect with PATH & WTC facilities? If Answers to Above are YES: What Sealing-Off Options Exist ? What Pumping Facilities are Planned ? Where ? Capacity? Reliability ? Is a Levee System || to West Street Feasible? Up to what Height? How long would it be effective, given SLR. GIS-based Risk Assessment Tool 'HAZUS-MH' (FEMA's "Hazards in the United States - Multi Hazards Version": Earthquakes, Wind, Flood). Risk = Sum ( $ / year or /event over Region rkrzsiril x .Asshjs x yuisiar^bWiy) probability per time $ value 0 < V < 1 Risk Expected Losses for either a scenario event ($) or in terms of probabilistic annual losses ($/year) • Hazards Probability per unit time of exceeding a certain hazard, e.g. wind speed or flood height (P=1 for scenario event) Replacement Value in Dollars for Buildings or Infrastructure, (or $ / live!) j VijJ/jarsj/jJJJxy Dimensionless Value between 0 and 1. It is the Damaged Fraction of Replacement Value of a Given Asset, for the Specified Hazard Level the Asset is exposed to. HAZUS-MH also has a Built-in Economic Model for Damage-Related, Indirect Economic Losses; e.g. for Losses related to building damage and closure; but Its default version is weak In assessing vulnerabilities of infrastructure systems. Requires user input for infrastructure assets and their vulnerabilities. SEMO 2006 HAZUS HURRICANE MODELING WORST CASE SCENARIO - TRACK 1 CATEGORY 3 (125 MPH) HAZUS ESTIMATED PEAK GUST (MPH) | 68-78 | 79-86 87-96 97-105 106 - 112 113- 121 122 - 130 ] 131 - 137 | 138 - 143 I 144 - 148 NOAA SLOSH MODEL: Surge Heights Translated into Inundated Areas by Dan O'Brien, NYSEMO Cost > a o 73 CD a -h o 3 if* o DG O 3 if* Ol o DG O 3 if* O O DD O 3 Ol o DD O 3 o DD if* M O o DD O 3 M Ol O DD O 3 CO o o DD O 3 CO Ol o DD O 3 if* O o DD O 3 CD 2 -< m Track 1- Slow Track 9- Slow Track 5- Slow Track 1- Fast Track 2- Slow Track 6- Slow Track 9- Fast Track 10- Slow s Track 5- Fast O Track 2- Fast Track 7- Slow Trackl 1- Slow Track 3- Slow Track 6- Fast Track 10- Fast Track 1- Moderate Track 12- Slow Track 8- Slow Track 11- Fast Track 7- Fast Track 9- Moderate Track 3- Fast Track 5- Moderate Track 2- Moderate Track 4- Slow Track 6- Moderate Track 10- Moderate Track 8- Fast 2 Track 1- Slow * Track 12-Fast 5 Track 7- Moderate 3. Track 9- Slow ° Track 5- Slow Track 11- Moderate Track 4- Fast Track 3- Moderate Track 2- Slow Track 6- Slow Track 10- Slow Track 8- Moderate Track 9- Fast Track 7- Slow Track 11- Slow Track4- Moderate Track 3- Slow Track 12- Moderate Track 1- Fast Track 5- Fast Track 10- Fast Track 8- Slow Track 12- Slow Track 6- Fast Track 2- Fast Track 4- Slow Track 11- Fast Track 7- Fast Track 3- Fast Track 8- Fast Track 12- Fast Track 4- Fast Ol 7) = o -■ c o CD ^ Q- 5 O ^ E 5" ° o X O c a o o o Is 0) c -I -! O f 5 0 a ft) 3 0 — > N E C/) Sea Level Rise Makes a Bad Situation Worse ! The Battery, NYC 2000 2020 2040 2060 2080 2100 Year Reduction in Return Period of the 100-Year Flood due tO Sea Level Rise Only (ConstantStorm Frequency). Future Flood Return Periods (in Years) for a Land Elevation that in the 1960s was reached by a 100-Year Coastal Flood 100 80 60 - 40 20 - 0 New York City □ Current trend □ CCGG □ CCGS □ HCGG ■ HCGS 10yr 2020s 2050s 2080s 21st Century Decades In 2008 Mayor Bloomberg appointed the NPCC, NYC Panel on Climate Change Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Volume 1196, Climate Change Adaptation in New York City: Building a Risk Management Response-New York City Panel on Climate Change 2010 Report May 2010 i"y C*% The New York V \mS Academy of Sciences http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi /10.1111/nyas.2010.1196.issue-1/issuetoc mi Appendix A CLIMATE RISK INFORMATION Climate Change Scenarios & Implications _for NYC Infrastructure New York City Panel on Climate Change Lead Authors Radley Horton {Columbia University), Cynthia Rosenzweig (NASA, Columbia University) Contributing Authors Vivien Görnitz (Columbia University), Daniel Bader (Columbia University), Megan G'Grady (Columbia University) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.eom/doi/10.1111 /j.1749-6632.2010.05323.x/pdf FIGURE C.1. CornoreSiensivi Set of Sea Level Rise Projections New York City and the Surrounding Region 1 M Oft NPCC's 2080 SLR Scenarios for NYC 3 ft" 4 ft 26 2fi 30 012: 3*1 |£ tt 4Ü 32 U 4£ 4 hQ 52 54 Sfc^Bft g| r-l RMi jir I 5 ft Tim schematic shorn sea level rise praj&sticns for ifi 2WQs mtatm to the 2QÜQ-2QM period, based m Ohres distind meih&fotoQto*- 77w