Natural hazard risk analysis in the framework of water safety plans

Author:

Amadio Jessica1ORCID,Kanakoudis Vasilis2,Dimkić Dejan3,Matić Branislava4,Banovec Primoz5,Boljat Ivana6,Campione Emanuela7,Čenčur Curk Barbara8,Duro Andrea7,Kovac Darko9,Papadopoulou Anastasia10,Papakonstantinou Argiris11,Lukač Reberski Jasmina6,Srša Matjaž12,Tsitsifli Stavroula11ORCID,Romano Emanuele1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. a Water Research Institute – National Research Council of Italy, Montelibretti (Rome), Italy

2. b Civil Engineering Department, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece

3. c Strategic planning Department, Environmental Protection and International Cooperation, Jaroslav Cerni Water Institute, Belgrade, Serbia

4. d Educons University, Novi Sad, Serbia

5. e Faculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia

6. f Department of Hydrogeology and Engineering Geology, Croatian Geological Survey, Zagreb, Croatia

7. g Civil Protection Department of the Italian Presidency of the Council of Ministers, Rome, Italy

8. h Faculty of Natural Sciences and Engineering, Department of Geology, Ljubljana, Slovenia

9. i Limited liability company ‘Vodovod I Kanalizacija’ Niksic, Niksic, Montenegro

10. j Civil Engineering Department, University of Thessaly, Volos, Greece

11. k Municipal Water Supply and Sewerage Company of Larissa, Larissa, Greece

12. l Kamnik Municipality, Kamnik, Slovenia

Abstract

Abstract The available literature on natural hazard risk analysis focused on the implementation of water safety plans (WSPs) is surprisingly quite poor, despite the significant increase in the number and severity of disasters and adverse effects on drinking water supply systems generated by natural hazards. At the same time, WSPs that conveniently account for natural hazards with a comprehensive approach ‘from source to tap’ are still scarce as they typically occur at larger spatial scales and adequate prevention, mitigation and adaptation require efficient inter-institutional collaborations. The aim of this paper is to highlight the main bottlenecks for water utilities to include natural hazards in the development of their WSPs. The research adopted a stakeholders-oriented approach, involving a considerable number of water utilities (168), water sectoral agencies (15) and institutions (68) across the Adriatic-Ionian Region through a stepwise process that generated joint SWOT analysis, the development of a decision support system (DSS) focused on WSPs procedures and tabletop exercises. The final outcomes generated strategic documents (REWAS – Adrion Road map for resilient water supply) that highlighted the necessity for efficient cross-sectoral and inter-institutional cooperation in the development of well-founded and robust WSPs to address natural hazard risk analysis for water supply systems (DWSS).

Publisher

IWA Publishing

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