Assessing the Effects of Forest Fires on Interconnected Critical Infrastructures under Climate Change. Evidence from South France
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- ➢
- Resilience for what—the disturbances which are caused by natural hazards which may be exacerbated due to climate change represented in Layer 1, such as forest fires, flooding, extreme winds, storms, lightning, and also their compound events.
- ➢
- Resilience of what—the context which is CI, their networks and interdependencies as incorporated in Layer 2. These require a detailed description of their assets, including specific attributes and also their interconnections and bidirectional dependencies.
- ➢
- Risks and Impacts—which includes the consequences of a hazard and the likelihood of the occurrence, detailed in Layer 3.
- ➢
- Capacities of CI, such as the ability to anticipate and reduce the impact; ability to buffer and bear; ability to be repaired easily and efficiently included in the final Layer 4. Resilience parameters, i.e., properties that indicate different capacities, also included in Layer: anticipatory the climate hazard, absorbance of the impacts, coping with the impacts, restoration to normality, and adaptive capacity.
2. Case Study Conduction Methodology
- Contact with CI operators (and emergency responders in the region. The ones that are most likely to be affected by heatwave and forest fires were targeted. Both infrastructure operators (RTE for electricity transmission network, ENEDIS for local distribution electricity, and ESCOTA as the highway operator) and public authorities (zonal prefect authorities responsible for deployment of aerial means for fire-fighting, prefect authorities related to decision to cut the electric lines, firefighter units SDIS13 and SDIS 83, and the regional coordination center EMIZ) were contacted and participated.
- A table top exercise was followed, involving the same participants, with main priorities to (a) identify the main cascading effects between the CI; (b) validate the developed scenario in terms of location, reference meteorological conditions, and linkage to the climate change scenario.
- At the request of the operators and with the coordination of the authorities, a crisis command post exercise was organized based on the developed scenario. The event took place in October 2017 in the Zonal Civil Protection Coordination Center of South of France (CeZOC).
- A final workshop where the scenario and software tools were tested and climate change adaptation and risk mitigation tools were demonstrated and evaluated.
- Raise awareness on vulnerabilities and interdependencies across CI and organizations.
- Analyze the impacts of network failures and develop the corresponding countermeasures.
- Advance resilience across inherently interdependent critical infrastructure systems and communities.
- Test and generate knowledge with their respective internal tools in particular stressing situations.
3. Presentation of the Case Study
3.1. Geographic Area
- The Mediterranean coast is characterized by low shores and cliffs. It shows strong economic and demographic dynamics, in particular in the Bouches-du-Rhône department. The natural reserve of Camargue appears as an exception where human activities remain very limited.
- The center and the western parts are composed of alluvial plains, lowlands, and hills. The Rhône and Durance Valleys represent major traffic routes driving a flourishing economy, notably and related to the production of electricity.
- The Provence hinterland and the Alpine range (located north-east of the Region) is a sparsely populated area. The decline of agriculture enables forest to grow and the development of peri-urbanization.
3.2. PACA Critical Infrastructures
3.3. Outline Rationale and Description of the Specific Scenario Retained
4. Extreme Event under Climate Change
4.1. Climate Change Induced Forest Fire Risk
4.2. Modeling the Fire Spreading under Future Climate
5. Impact Assessment
5.1. Impacts on the Electricity Sector
- If ROS > 800 m/h or FLI > 1700 kW/m and burned area > 50 ha, then wood electric poles start to burn and the ones in metal start to be damaged If ROS > 1800 m/h or FLI > 70,000 kW/m and burned area > 500 ha, then wood electric poles are all burned and the ones in metal are all damaged.
5.2. Impacts on the Road Network
6. Discussion and Conclusions
- To raise awareness on vulnerabilities and interdependencies between networks from different types of CI operators, first responders and regional emergency management authorities. Although there is interaction between electricity infrastructure operators, this process helped identify bi-direction interconnections between electricity and transportation CI. This allowed all involved groups to identify impacts beyond their domain thus allowing for a holistic impact and cascade effects in a large region.
- To analyze the impacts of network failures and develop the corresponding countermeasures, also considering the changing characteristics of forest fires extremes under climate change. This collective effort was highly important to raise awareness of climate change impacts, as the majority of the engaged infrastructures operators did not consider it as a high priority threat. Further, extreme scenarios, as those projected by climate change, are not considered in their operational planning, thus demonstrating a pressing need to start thinking with a broader perspective.
- To shift towards an integrative approach for advancing resilience across inherently interdependent critical infrastructure systems. The EU-CIRCLE framework demonstrated the need for managing organizational and governance issues on a regional scale, that will inform future CI design and emergency response. Operational imperatives should be considered when planning actions towards risk mitigation and cascading failures considering fast recovery of CI operations in case of climate extreme events.
- To allow the associated stakeholders to test common generated knowledge with their respective internal tools, and in particular stress situations. This process also contributed to the thorough examination of crisis management tools and flow of information between different involved CI and national authorities.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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CI Sector | Asset | Impacts on Asset | Impact Threshold |
---|---|---|---|
Energy (Electricity) | Distribution lines Extra-High Voltage (ΕΗV) transmission lines | Fires in and around distribution lines can burn down the lines and damage distribution poles. According to [52] the strength of steel is reduced to 0.5 at a temperature range from 500 to 600 °C and this is the point where steel transmission towers are not able to bear the design load. At this 420 °C the galvanising increases with consequences for the corrosion prevention after the fire [53]. This temperature is supposed to be reached after 10 min of fire exposure. | Structural threshold:
Functional threshold:
|
Distribution substations Transformer Electrical grid operation | Fires can create a “flashover” from electricity infrastructure as the greatest risk comes from smoke and particulate matter [which] can ionize the air, creating an electrical path away from the lines. This can shut down the lines and produce power outages [54]. | Functional threshold:
| |
Step up_down substations | In most cases substations are normally located around defoliated areas; however, there is always possibility of a physical damage occurrence to substation facilities [55]. | Same threshold values as described in ΕΗV transmission lines. | |
Wooden pylon | Wooden pylons are submitted to fire front leading to their destruction [56] | Flame temperature (>650 °C) |
No Visibility (Road Should be Closed) | Medium Visibility (Road Should be Closed) | Good Visibility (No Closure of Road) |
---|---|---|
PMmean > 30 mg/m3 | 10 < PMmean < 30 mg/m3 | 10 < PMmean mg/m3 |
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Sfetsos, A.; Giroud, F.; Clemencau, A.; Varela, V.; Freissinet, C.; LeCroart, J.; Vlachogiannis, D.; Politi, N.; Karozis, S.; Gkotsis, I.; et al. Assessing the Effects of Forest Fires on Interconnected Critical Infrastructures under Climate Change. Evidence from South France. Infrastructures 2021, 6, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020016
Sfetsos A, Giroud F, Clemencau A, Varela V, Freissinet C, LeCroart J, Vlachogiannis D, Politi N, Karozis S, Gkotsis I, et al. Assessing the Effects of Forest Fires on Interconnected Critical Infrastructures under Climate Change. Evidence from South France. Infrastructures. 2021; 6(2):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020016
Chicago/Turabian StyleSfetsos, Athanasios, Frederique Giroud, Alice Clemencau, Vassiliki Varela, Catherine Freissinet, Jean LeCroart, Diamando Vlachogiannis, Nadia Politi, Stelios Karozis, Ilias Gkotsis, and et al. 2021. "Assessing the Effects of Forest Fires on Interconnected Critical Infrastructures under Climate Change. Evidence from South France" Infrastructures 6, no. 2: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020016
APA StyleSfetsos, A., Giroud, F., Clemencau, A., Varela, V., Freissinet, C., LeCroart, J., Vlachogiannis, D., Politi, N., Karozis, S., Gkotsis, I., Eftychidis, G., Hedel, R., & Hahmann, S. (2021). Assessing the Effects of Forest Fires on Interconnected Critical Infrastructures under Climate Change. Evidence from South France. Infrastructures, 6(2), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020016