Rapid remote volcanic ashfall impact assessment for the 2022 eruption of Hunga volcano, Tonga: a bespoke approach and lessons identified

Author:

Weir Alana M.1ORCID,Williams James H.2,Wilson Thomas M.2,Hayes Josh3,Stewart Carol4,Leonard Graham3,Magill Christina3,Jenkins Susanna5,Williams Shaun6,Craig Heather M.7,Kula Taaniela8,Fraser Stuart9,Pomonis Antonios10,Gunasekera Rashmin10,Daniell James E.10,Coultas Emma7

Affiliation:

1. University of Geneva Faculty of Science: Universite de Geneve Faculte des Sciences

2. Te Whare Wānanga o WaitahaTe Kaupeka Pūtaiao: University of Canterbury Faculty of Science

3. Te Pu Ao: GNS Science Ltd

4. Massey University Te Kura Hauora Tangata: Massey University College of Health

5. Nanyang Technological University

6. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

7. Te Whare Wananga o WaitahaTe Kaupeka Putaiao: University of Canterbury Faculty of Science

8. Tonga Geological Services

9. Fraser Disaster Risk Consulting Ltd

10. World Bank Group

Abstract

Abstract

When disasters occur, rapid impact assessments are required to direct response priorities, support in-country efforts and inform the mobilisation of aid. The 15 January 2022 eruption of Hunga volcano, Tonga, and the resulting atmospheric shockwave, ashfall, underwater mass disturbance and tsunami, caused substantial impacts across the Kingdom of Tonga. Volcanic impacts of the scale observed after the eruption are rare, necessitating a reliance on international advice and assistance. The situation was complicated by the loss of Tonga’s international submarine fibreoptic cable, causing a complete loss of communications for approximately 20 days, along with border closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic. A need emerged for a rapid remote volcanic impact assessment and provision of specialist advice to help inform the response of international partners. Here we present a novel methodology for conducting rapid remote volcanic ashfall impact assessments, conducted over a 10-day period following the eruption. We used three different hazard models for ashfall thickness across the main island of Tongatapu and available asset information and vulnerability functions for buildings, agriculture, electricity networks, water supply and roads, to provide initial estimates of losses due to ashfall from the 15 January eruption. For buildings, we estimated losses, both as total losses and as percentages of the total replacement cost of buildings on Tongatapu. For agriculture, we made probabilistic estimates of production losses for three different crop classes. For ashfall cleanup, we estimated ranges of ashfall volumes requiring cleanup from road surfaces and roofs. For water supply, electricity networks and roads, our analysis was limited to assessing the exposure of important assets to ashfall, as we had insufficient information on system configurations to take the analysis further. Key constraints to our analysis were the limited nature of critical infrastructure asset inventories, and the lack of volcanic vulnerability models for tropical regions including Pacific Island nations. Key steps towards iteratively improving rapid remote impacts assessments will include developing vulnerability functions for tropical environments, including Pacific islands, as well as ground-truthing estimated losses from remote approaches against in-person impact assessment campaigns.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference64 articles.

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