Climate change has led to more frequent and severe extreme weather events, which impact critical infrastructure networks such as railway and power systems. Although infrastructure networks are interdependent, the analysis to understand the impact of weather events on infrastructure systems is usually performed in sector-specific silos. A methodology to examine how the same weather events affect different infrastructure sectors is presented, in order to understand cross-sectoral impact of extreme weather for interconnected regional infrastructure. Fragility modelling was used to examine the impact of temperature and rainfall on power and rail system failures using the West Midlands (in the UK) as a case study. The results demonstrated that the impact of temperature was broadly consistent across both infrastructure networks, showing less impact until specific upper and lower thresholds are passed; these thresholds were found to be similar for the different infrastructure networks evaluated, but railway infrastructure was found to be impacted more by lower temperatures. A growing correlation between the number of faults on power and railway systems was also found for both rainfall and temperature, indicating the value in coordinating preparation and planning efforts. For infrastructure operators and owners, regional resilience forums and other decision makers, this study provides an approach to assess the regional impact of extreme weather across multiple infrastructure sectors. The results give useful insights to inform the allocation of resources in response to extreme weather events.
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May 2024
Research Article|
February 12 2024
Weather-related fragility modelling of critical infrastructure: a power and railway case study Available to Purchase
Zixuan Jia, BEng, Mask
;
Department of Electronic, Electrical and Systems Engineering, School of Engineering, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
(corresponding author: zxj548@student.bham.ac.uk)
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Daniel L Donaldson, BSc, MEng, PhD, PE
;
Department of Electronic, Electrical and Systems Engineering, School of Engineering, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
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Emma Ferranti, BSc, MSc, PhD, AFHEA
Department of Civil Engineering, School of Engineering, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
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(corresponding author: zxj548@student.bham.ac.uk)
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
June 22 2023
Accepted:
June 23 2023
Online ISSN: 1751-7672
Print ISSN: 0965-089X
Emerald Publishing Limited: All rights reserved
2024
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering (2024) 177 (5): 50–58.
Article history
Received:
June 22 2023
Accepted:
June 23 2023
Citation
Jia Z, Donaldson DL, Ferranti E (2024), "Weather-related fragility modelling of critical infrastructure: a power and railway case study". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering, Vol. 177 No. 5 pp. 50–58, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jcien.23.00115
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